How to Revert git add in Git (Unstage Files)

Mistakenly added a file to the staging area with git add? Don’t worry — Git makes it easy to undo that action without affecting your actual file content. This is known as unstaging a file.

In this post, you’ll learn how to revert a git add, whether you want to unstage one file, multiple files, or everything at once.


🧾 What Is the Staging Area?

In Git, the staging area is a place where you prepare your changes before committing them. When you run:

git add filename

You’re telling Git: “This file is ready to be committed.”

If you change your mind before committing, you can unstage it without discarding the actual changes in the file.


🛠️ 1. Unstage a Single File

To remove one file from the staging area:

git restore --staged filename

Example:

git restore --staged index.js

This keeps your file changes intact — it just removes the file from the staged list.


🔁 2. Unstage All Files

If you’ve added multiple files and want to unstage all of them:

git restore --staged .

Or use the older equivalent:

git reset

Both commands remove all files from the staging area without deleting or changing the content.


🧰 3. Unstage a File Using git reset (Legacy Option)

Before git restore was introduced, this was the standard way:

git reset HEAD filename

Example:

git reset HEAD README.md

This works the same way — it unstages the file but leaves your code changes untouched.


🔍 Check the Status Before and After

Use git status to see what’s staged and what’s not:

git status

You’ll see files in either the staged or unstaged section depending on their current state.


🧠 Summary

TaskCommand
Unstage a single filegit restore --staged filename
Unstage all filesgit restore --staged . or git reset
Legacy unstage (older Git versions)git reset HEAD filename

🏁 Conclusion

Accidentally staged the wrong files? No problem. Reverting a git add is quick and safe — it doesn’t delete your work, it just gives you a chance to organize your commit properly.

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