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My current solution for renaming the project folder is:

  • Remove the project from the solution.
  • Rename the folder outside Visual Studio.
  • Re-add the project to the solution.

Is there a better way?

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    There is no simple, one-click way of doing it. Not from within Visual Studio, anyways. Oct 17, 2008 at 6:55
  • In andersjanmyr's solution: you may press <kbd>Alt</kbd> + <kbd>Enter</kbd> to bring up the Properties Page for the unavailable project and set the "File Path" property there; since it is not available in the right-click context menu of the unavailable project (in Visual&nbsp;Studio&nbsp;2008). Oct 21, 2010 at 21:55
  • This answer includes the procedure for TFS and is the best overall answer I've found for this: stackoverflow.com/a/10853509/10245
    – Tim Abell
    May 23, 2014 at 22:22
  • I wont put this as an answer because you shouldnt do it, but doing an agent ransack for the project name and replacing all references to it with the new file name does work if you include all folder and subfolders, and both rename files and also replace text within files. Ive done it several times now, never with more than a few minutes of cleanup afterwards. Aug 24, 2017 at 14:42
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    @Marco that will only change the project name in VS, not the project folder name. I did that and now my project name is different but the project folder still is the same, even more confusing. As of 2019 I also had to remove the project from the solution, rename the folder and then add the project back. Dec 11, 2019 at 9:44

43 Answers 43

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Open .sln in a text editor, and in the following line change <FolderName> to your new folder name Project("{FAE04EC0-301F-11D3-BF4B-00C04F79EFBC}") = "Ricky", "\.csproj", "{021CC6B0-8CFB-4194-A103-C19AF869D965}"

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First, close the localhost and then right-click on the folder. You will get rename option. (Visual Studio 2022). This worked for me. If you don't get rename option then go through other solutions.

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After changing the folder name, open the .sln file in Notepad and change the path to new path.

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Similar issues arise when a new project has to be created, and you want a different project folder name than the project name.

When you create a new project, it gets stored at

./path/to/pro/ject/YourProject/YourProject.**proj

Let's assume you wanted to have it directly in the ject folder:

./path/to/pro/ject/YourProject.**proj

My workaround to accomplish this is to create the project with the last part of the path as its name, so that it doesn't create an additional directory:

./path/to/pro/ject/ject.**proj

When you now rename the project from within Visual Studio, you achieve the goal without having to leave Visual Studio:

./path/to/pro/ject/YourProject.**proj

The downside of this approach is that you have to adjust the default namespace and the name of the Output binary as well, and that you have to update namespaces in all files that are included within the project template.

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I use Visual Studio 2013 and TFS 2013.

I did it like this:

  1. Open Visual Studio, without opening the solution itself, and use Source Control Explorer to find and rename folders for projects
  2. Double-click the solution file in Source Control Explorer to open a solution.
  3. You get a question: "Projects have recently been added to this solution. Do you want to get them from source control?", and you choose Yes.
  4. Now the folder and project structure are there, but now files, so now you get the latest version from source control
  5. Try to build and commit changes.
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  • so no windows explorer things. In the end, you can delete all local files and get whole (clean) project from source control.
    – Muris
    Apr 25, 2014 at 15:50
  • I just found out that it is also possible, due to folder rearranging, that solution file creates empty folder where some project was stored. Then, open solution file in notepad and decrees number of property SccNumberOfProjects by the number of empty directories created, and delete corresponding SccProjectUniqueName#, SccProjectName#, SccLocalPath# and other properties with same #.
    – Muris
    Apr 29, 2014 at 9:21
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The simplest way is to go to the property of the window, change the name of the default namespaces, and then the rename is done.

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  • What is the window you speak of? Do you mean the properties window of the project? Jan 24, 2020 at 16:42
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I did the following:

<Create a backup of the entire folder>

  1. Rename the project from within Visual Studio 2013 (optional/not needed).

  2. Export the project as a template.

  3. Close the solution.

  4. Reopen the solution

  5. Create a project from the saved template and use the name you like.

  6. Delete from the solution explorer the previous project.

At this point I tried to compile the new solution, and to do so, I had to manually copy some resources and headers to the new project folder from the old project folder. Do this until it compiles without errors. Now this new project saved the ".exe" file to the previous folder.*

So ->

  1. Go to Windows Explorer and manually copy the solution file from the old project folder to the new project folder.

  2. Close the solution, and open the solution from within the new project.

  3. Changed the configuration back to (x64) if needed.

  4. Delete the folder of the project with the old name from the folder of the solution.

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Or simply, copy all the codes, open a new project with the desired name, and paste the code. Run debug and then delete the previous project. Done!

It worked for me!

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The other answers provide lots of details on how to do it. Here's a shortcut, though, that can save you some work:

  1. Rename the project folder
  2. Rename the .csproj file
  3. Mass replace the project name in all files in the solution (I use GrepWin, it has a convenient GUI with preview)

That way you don't have to mess around tediously with the Visual Studio GUI. You can also fix the namespace that way. You can use source control to validate the changes (e.g. open TortoiseGit Commit and look at the changes).

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The simplest way:

  1. Create a template from the current project
    Project -> Export Template... -> Project Template -> Finish
  2. Create a new project using the template with the name you want it to have
    File -> New Project -> Find the template -> Give it the name you want -> Add to existing solution or just as new

That's it, you're done, you can now delete the other project if you want, but make sure the new one works as expected first. The template should retain all dependencies and project settings.

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A bit late to the party but in VS2022 your suggested way was still the easiest for me (I do not like editing .sln files directly).

That is:

  • Remove the project from the solution.

  • Rename the folder outside

  • Re-add the project to the solution.


For example if you want to rename Project 'HelloWorld' to 'HelloStackOverflow'.

  1. In Visual Studio: Rename Project from 'HelloWorld' to 'HelloStackOverflow'
  2. In Visual Studio: Remove Project 'HelloStackOverflow'
  3. In the File System: Navigate to folder: Rename 'HelloWorld' to 'HelloStackOverflow'
  4. In Visual Studio: Add existing Project 'HelloStackOverflow' in VS2022
  5. In Visual Studio: If there are dependencies to this project, you have to remove them and add them to the new project.
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  • This will not change namespaces or configuration files. After the steps you've mentioned, I would recommend to execute the command grep -inr "HelloWorld" /path/to/project/**/*. Then you can see where the old name still exists and change it manually.
    – Kluddizz
    Apr 15, 2022 at 16:00
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What worked for me:

  1. Rename the folder name in project references in VS e.g.: <ProjectReference Include="..\FolderName\ProjectName.csproj" />)

  2. In file explorer, go to the folder and change its name

  3. Go to the SNL file (e.g. in VSC) and rename the folder name e.g.:

Project("{}") = "FolderName", "FolderName\ProjectName", "{}" EndProject)

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Right click project → Properties, and set (name) to the required name.

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