terraform/website/docs/commands/apply.html.markdown

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---
layout: "docs"
page_title: "Command: apply"
sidebar_current: "docs-commands-apply"
description: |-
The `terraform apply` command is used to apply the changes required to reach the desired state of the configuration, or the pre-determined set of actions generated by a `terraform plan` execution plan.
---
# Command: apply
> For a hands-on tutorial, try the [Get Started](https://learn.hashicorp.com/terraform/getting-started/intro?utm_source=WEBSITE&utm_medium=WEB_IO&utm_offer=ARTICLE_PAGE&utm_content=DOCS) track on HashiCorp Learn.
The `terraform apply` command is used to apply the changes required
to reach the desired state of the configuration, or the pre-determined
set of actions generated by a `terraform plan` execution plan.
## Usage
Usage: `terraform apply [options] [dir-or-plan]`
By default, `apply` scans the current directory for the configuration
and applies the changes appropriately. However, a path to another configuration
or an execution plan can be provided. Explicit execution plan files can be
used to split plan and apply into separate steps within
[automation systems](https://learn.hashicorp.com/terraform/development/running-terraform-in-automation).
If no explicit plan file is given on the command line, `terraform apply` will
create a new plan automatically and prompt for approval to apply it. If the
created plan does not include any changes to resources or to root module
output values then `terraform apply` will exit immediately, without prompting.
The command-line flags are all optional. The list of available flags are:
* `-backup=path` - Path to the backup file. Defaults to `-state-out` with
the ".backup" extension. Disabled by setting to "-".
* `-compact-warnings` - If Terraform produces any warnings that are not
accompanied by errors, show them in a more compact form that includes only
the summary messages.
* `-lock=true` - Lock the state file when locking is supported.
* `-lock-timeout=0s` - Duration to retry a state lock.
* `-input=true` - Ask for input for variables if not directly set.
* `-auto-approve` - Skip interactive approval of plan before applying.
* `-no-color` - Disables output with coloring.
* `-parallelism=n` - Limit the number of concurrent operation as Terraform
[walks the graph](/docs/internals/graph.html#walking-the-graph). Defaults to
10.
* `-refresh=true` - Update the state for each resource prior to planning
and applying. This has no effect if a plan file is given directly to
apply.
* `-state=path` - Path to the state file. Defaults to "terraform.tfstate".
Ignored when [remote state](/docs/state/remote.html) is used.
* `-state-out=path` - Path to write updated state file. By default, the
`-state` path will be used. Ignored when
[remote state](/docs/state/remote.html) is used.
* `-target=resource` - A [Resource
Address](/docs/internals/resource-addressing.html) to target. For more
information, see
[the targeting docs from `terraform plan`](/docs/commands/plan.html#resource-targeting).
* `-var 'foo=bar'` - Set a variable in the Terraform configuration. This flag
can be set multiple times. Variable values are interpreted as
[HCL](/docs/configuration/syntax.html#HCL), so list and map values can be
specified via this flag.
* `-var-file=foo` - Set variables in the Terraform configuration from
a [variable file](/docs/configuration/variables.html#variable-files). If
a `terraform.tfvars` or any `.auto.tfvars` files are present in the current
directory, they will be automatically loaded. `terraform.tfvars` is loaded
first and the `.auto.tfvars` files after in alphabetical order. Any files
specified by `-var-file` override any values set automatically from files in
the working directory. This flag can be used multiple times.