--- layout: "commands-state" page_title: "Command: state rm" sidebar_current: "docs-state-sub-rm" description: |- The `terraform state rm` command removes items from the Terraform state. --- # Command: state rm The `terraform state rm` command is used to remove items from the [Terraform state](/docs/state/index.html). This command can remove single resources, single instances of a resource, entire modules, and more. ## Usage Usage: `terraform state rm [options] ADDRESS...` The command will remove all the items matched by the addresses given. Items removed from the Terraform state are _not physically destroyed_. Items removed from the Terraform state are only no longer managed by Terraform. For example, if you remove an AWS instance from the state, the AWS instance will continue running, but `terraform plan` will no longer see that instance. There are various use cases for removing items from a Terraform state file. The most common is refactoring a configuration to no longer manage that resource (perhaps moving it to another Terraform configuration/state). The state will only be saved on successful removal of all addresses. If any specific address errors for any reason (such as a syntax error), the state will not be modified at all. This command will output a backup copy of the state prior to saving any changes. The backup cannot be disabled. Due to the destructive nature of this command, backups are required. This command requires one or more addresses that point to a resources in the state. Addresses are in [resource addressing format](/docs/commands/state/addressing.html). The command-line flags are all optional. The list of available flags are: * `-backup=path` - Path to a backup file Defaults to the state path plus a timestamp with the ".backup" extension. * `-state=path` - Path to the state file. Defaults to "terraform.tfstate". ## Example: Remove a Resource The example below removes a single resource in a module: ``` $ terraform state rm module.foo.packet_device.worker[0] ``` ## Example: Remove a Module The example below removes an entire module: ``` $ terraform state rm module.foo ```