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Warning: This documentation refers to experimental features that may change.
Python versions
A Python installation is composed of a Python interpreter (i.e. the python executable), the standard library, and other supporting files. It is common for an operating system to come with a Python version installed and there are many tools to help manage Python versions.
Requesting a version
uv will automatically download a Python version if it cannot be found.
In stable commands, this behavior requires enabling preview mode. For example, when creating a virtual environment:
uv venv --preview --python 3.11.6
uv will ensure that Python 3.11.6 is available — downloading and installing it if necessary — then create the virtual environment with it.
For commands that are in preview, like uv sync, preview behavior is always on.
uv sync --python 3.12.3
Many Python version request formats are supported:
<version>e.g.3,3.12,3.12.3<version-specifier>e.g.>=3.12,<3.13<implementation>e.g.cpythonorcp<implementation>@<version>e.g.cpython@3.12<implementation><version>e.g.cpython3.12orcp312<implementation><version-specifier>e.g.cpython>=3.12,<3.13<implementation>-<version>-<os>-<arch>-<libc>e.g.cpython-3.12.3-macos-aarch64-none
At this time, only CPython downloads are supported. However, PyPy support is planned.
Installing a Python version
Sometimes it is preferable to install the Python versions before they are needed.
To install a Python version at a specific version:
uv python install 3.12.3
To install the latest patch version:
uv python install 3.12
To install a version that satisfies constraints:
uv python install '>=3.8,<3.10'
To install multiple versions:
uv python install 3.9 3.10 3.11
Project Python versions
By default uv python install will verify that a managed Python version is installed or install the latest version.
However, a project may define a .python-version file specifying the default Python version to be used. If present,
uv will install the Python version listed in the file.
Alternatively, a project that requires multiple Python versions may also define a .python-versions file. If present,
uv will install all of the Python versions listed in the file. This file takes precedence over the .python-version file.
uv will also respect Python requirements defined in a pyproject.toml file during project command invocations.
Viewing available Python versions
To list installed and available Python versions:
uv python list
By default, downloads for other platforms and old patch versions are hidden.
To view all versions:
uv python list --all-versions
To view Python versions for other platforms:
uv python list --all-platforms
To exclude downloads and only show installed Python versions:
uv python list --only-installed
Adjusting Python version preferences
By default, uv will attempt to use Python versions found on the system and only download managed interpreters when necessary.
However, It's possible to adjust uv's Python version selection preference with the python-preference option.
only-managed: Only use managed Python installations; never use system Python installationsinstalled: Prefer installed Python installations, only download managed Python installations if no system Python installation is foundmanaged: Prefer managed Python installations over system Python installations, even if fetching is requiredsystem: Prefer system Python installations over managed Python installationsonly-system: Only use system Python installations; never use managed Python installations
These options allow disabling uv's managed Python versions entirely or always using them and ignoring any existing system installations.
Discovery order
When searching for a Python version, the following locations are checked:
- Managed Python versions in the
UV_PYTHON_INSTALL_DIR. - A Python interpreter on the
PATHaspython3on macOS and Linux, orpython.exeon Windows. - On Windows, the Python interpreter returned by
py --list-pathsthat matches the requested version.
If a specific Python version is requested, e.g. --python 3.7, additional executable names are included in the search:
- A Python interpreter on the
PATHas, e.g.,python3.7on macOS and Linux.