Applies ToSharePoint Server Subscription Edition SharePoint Server 2019 SharePoint Server 2016 SharePoint Server 2013 Enterprise SharePoint in Microsoft 365 SharePoint Server 2010 Microsoft Lists

When versioning is enabled in a list or library, you can store, track, and restore items in a list and files in a library whenever they change. Versioning, combined with other settings, such as checkout, gives you control of the content posted on your site. You can also use versioning to view or restore an old version of a list or library.

Versioning overview

Anyone with permission to manage lists can turn versioning on or off for a list or library. Versioning is available for list items in all default list types—including calendars, issue tracking lists, and custom lists. It is also available for all file types that can be stored in libraries, including Web Part pages. For more info on setting up and using versioning, see Enable and configure versioning for a list or library.

If you are a Microsoft 365 customer, versioning is now turned on by default when you create a new library or list, and it will automatically save the last 500 versions of a document. This will help you prevent losing important documents or data. If you have existing libraries or lists on your site or on your team site that do not have versioning enabled, you can turn versioning on for them at any time.

You can use versioning to:

  • Track history of a version    When versioning is enabled, you can see when an item or file was changed and who changed it. You can also see when properties (information about the file) were changed. For example, if someone changes the due date of a list item, that information appears in the version history. You can also see the comments people make when they check files into libraries.

  • Restore a previous version    If you made a mistake in a current version, if the current version is corrupt, or if you simply like a previous version better, you can replace the current version with a previous one. The restored version becomes the new current version.

  • View a previous version    You can view a previous version without overwriting your current version. If you are viewing version history within a Microsoft Office document, such as a Word or Excel file, you can compare the two versions to determine what the differences are.

If your list or library limits versions, you should make sure that contributors are aware that earlier versions will be deleted when the version limit is reached.

When versioning is enabled, versions are created in the following situations:

  • When a list item or file is first created or when a file is uploaded.

    If file checkout is required, you must check the file in to create its first version.

  • When a file is uploaded that has the same name as an existing file.

  • When the properties of a list item or file are changed.

  • When an Office document is opened and saved. After a document is opened again, a new version will be created after an edit is saved.

  • Periodically, when editing and saving Office documents. Not all edits and saves create new versions. When saving edits frequently, for example, each new version captures a point in time rather than each individual edit. This is common when autosave is enabled.

  • During co-authoring of a document, when a different user begins working on the document or when a user clicks save to upload changes to the library. 

There can be up to three current versions of a file at any given time: the checked-out version, the latest minor or draft version, and the latest published or major version. All other versions are considered historical versions. Some current versions are only visible to users who have permissions to view them.

Usually, a major version represents a milestone, such as a file submitted for review or publication, whereas a minor version is a work in progress that isn't ready for all site participants to read. Depending on the way your team works, your team may be more likely to need its most recent minor versions, such as a version that was edited recently. Over time, your team may be less likely to need an older minor version.

Some organizations track both major and minor versions of files in their libraries. Others only track the major versions. Major versions are identified by whole numbers, such as 5.0; minor versions are identified by decimal numbers, such as 5.1.

Most organizations use minor versions when files are under development, and major versions when certain milestones are reached or when the files are ready for review by a wide audience. In many organizations, draft security is set to allow only the owner of a file and people who have permissions to approve files. That means that minor versions cannot be seen by anyone else until a major version is published.

Lists only support major versions. Each version of a list item is numbered with a whole number. If your organization requires approval of items in a list, the items remain in Pending status until they are approved by someone who has permissions to approve them. While in Pending status they are numbered with decimal numbers and are referred to as drafts.

The maximum number of minor versions is 511, and the number of major versions can be adjusted. For information on setting the number of major versions, check out the Controlling how many versions are stored section.

If you're using an online app or the latest desktop version and you attempt to save another minor version beyond the maximum amount, you will overwrite the most recent minor version. If you're using an old client, you will not be able to save or upload any changes at all. To avoid overwriting or to continue to upload changes, you must publish the next major version. Then you will be able to publish up to the maximum number of minor versions again for that major version. To learn how to publish new versions, check out Publish or unpublish a version of a file.

By overwriting or not saving minor versions, there is effectively no versioning on your file. Since updated applications will overwrite the most recent version and old clients won't save anything at all, once you've hit the minor versions limit your document history is no longer tracked.

For more on enabling and setting up versioning, including major and minor versions, see Enable and configure versioning for a list or library.

Version numbers are automatically added each time you create a new version. In a list or library that has major versioning enabled, the versions have whole numbers, such as 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, and so on. In libraries, your administrator might enable versioning for both major and minor versions. When minor versions are being tracked, they have decimal numbers such as 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, and so on. When one of those versions is published as a major version, its number becomes 2.0. Subsequent minor versions are numbered 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, and so on.

When you discard a checkout, the version number does not change. If the most recent version was version 3.0, it remains at 3.0 after you discard the checkout.

When you delete a version, the version goes to the Recycle Bin and its number goes with it. The Version History will show the remaining version numbers. The other version numbers do not change. For example, if you have a document that has minor versions 4.1 and 4.2, and you decide to delete version 4.1, the resulting version history shows only versions 4.0 and 4.2. The following picture shows this.

For more on enabling and setting up versioning, including major and minor versions, see Enable and configure versioning for a list or library.

Version history with one minor version deleted

You can configure who can view drafts of list items and files. Drafts are created in two situations:

  • When a minor version of a file is created or updated in a library that tracks major and minor versions.

  • When a list item or file is created or updated but not yet approved in a list or library in which content approval is required.

When you track major and minor versions, you can specify whether people must have permission to edit files before they can view and read a minor version. When this setting is applied, people who have permission to edit the file can work on the file, but those who have permission only to read the file cannot see the minor version. For example, you may not want everyone who has access to your library to see comments or revisions while a file is being edited. If major and minor versions are being tracked and no one has published a major version yet, the file is not visible for people who do not have permission to see draft items.

When content approval is required, you can specify if files that are pending approval can be viewed by people with permission to read, people with permission to edit, or only the author and people with permission to approve items. If both major and minor versions are being tracked, the author must publish a major version before the file can be submitted for approval. When content approval is required, people who have permission to read content but do not have permission to see draft items will see the last approved or major version of the file.

Regardless of whether people have permission to edit a file or not, if people search for a file that is in minor version, they won’t get results for it.

Some organizations allow unlimited versions of files and others apply limitations. You might discover, after checking in the latest version of a file, that an old version is missing. If your most recent version is 101.0 and you notice that there is no longer a version 1.0, it means that the administrator configured the library to allow only 100 major versions of a file. The addition of the 101st version causes the first version to be deleted. Only versions 2.0 through 101.0 remain. Similarly, if a 102nd version is added, only versions 3.0 through 102.0 remain.

The administrator may also decide to limit the number of minor versions to just those for a set number of the most recent versions. For example, if 100 major versions are allowed, the administrator might decide to retain minor drafts for only the most recent five major versions. The maximum number of minor versions between major versions is 511. For more information about major and minor version publishing and what happens when you have more than the maximum minor versions, check out the Major and minor versions section. To learn how to publish new versions, check out Publish or unpublish a version of a file.

In a library that limits the number of major versions that it keeps minor versions for, the minor versions are deleted for the previous major versions when the version limit is reached. For example, if you keep drafts for only 100 major versions, and your team creates 105 major versions, only the major versions will be kept for the earliest versions. The minor versions that are associated with the five earliest major versions — such as 1.2 or 2.3 — are deleted, but the major versions — 1, 2, and so on — are kept, unless your library also limits major versions.

Limiting the number of versions is generally a good practice. It means you can conserve space on the server and reduce clutter for users. But, if your organization is required to save all versions for legal or other reasons, don’t apply any limits.

For more on enabling and setting up versioning, including limits, see Enable and configure versioning for a list or library.

Both SharePoint in Microsoft 365 and SharePoint Server, for both Library Settings and List Settings, allow up to 511 minor versions per major version. This number cannot be changed.

  • Libraries

    • Versioning    SharePoint in Microsoft 365 requires versioning for Libraries; SharePoint Server allows you to select No Versioning as an option.

    • Major versions    SharePoint in Microsoft 365 Library Settings allows a range of 100-50000 major versions with exception of libraries in communcation sites; SharePoint Server Library Settings allows a range of 1-50000 major versions. PowerShell or Developer APIs allow a range of 1-50000 major versions. Note: It is recommended to maintain a minimum of 100 versions to maintain protection from Version recovery;

    • Minor versions    Both SharePoint in Microsoft 365 and SharePoint Server Library Settings allow a range of 1-50000 major versions allowed to have minor versions.

  • Lists

    • Versioning    Both SharePoint in Microsoft 365 and SharePoint Server List Settings allow you to disable versioning.

    • Major versions    Both SharePoint in Microsoft 365 and SharePoint Server List Settings allow a range of 1-50000 major versions.

    • Minor versions    Both SharePoint in Microsoft 365 and SharePoint Server List Settings allow a range of 1-50000 major versions allowed to have minor versions.

  • If you are a Microsoft 365 customer, versioning is turned on automatically when you create a library or list. Versioning can be disabled using PowerShell or Developer APIs. Note: Disabling Versioning is not recommended as it turns off protection from version recovery.

  • For SharePoint Server, versioning is turned on automatically when you create a library, but not when you create a list.

Anyone with permission to manage lists can turn versioning on or off. On many sites that is the same person who manages the site, because the lists and libraries inherit permissions from the site. In addition to enabling versioning, the site owner (or another person managing the list or library) decides whether to require content approval, who can view draft items, and if checkout is required. Each of these decisions has an impact on how versioning works. For example, if the person managing a library decides to require check-out, version numbers are only created when a file is checked in. If content approval is required, major version numbers are not applied until files are approved by someone who has permission to do so.

If the people who work in your library are planning to co-author documents, do not configure the library to require check-out. People cannot work as co-authors when the documents that they need are checked out.

To learn how to turn on versioning for a list or library, see Enable and configure versioning for a list or library.

If versioning is enabled in your library, the person who sets it up determines whether to track both major and minor versions and also determines who can see the minor versions. In most cases, when content approval is required, only the owner of the file, and people who have permission to approve items, can see the minor versions. In other libraries, anyone who can edit files in the library, or anyone who has Read permission to the library, can see all versions. After a version is approved, everyone who has Read permission to the list or library can see the version.

Although lists do not have major and minor versions, any item that is in Pending status is considered a draft. In most cases, only the creator of the item and persons who have Full Control or Design permissions can see drafts. A draft shows up in Pending status for those people, but others only see the most recent Approved version in the version history. If the file is rejected, it stays in Pending status until someone who has the necessary permissions deletes it.

By default, a pending item or file is visible only to its creator and to the people with permission to manage lists, but you can specify if other groups of users can view the item or file. If your library is set up to track both major and minor versions, the person who edits the file must first publish a major version of the file.

For more info on setting up approval for documents, see Require approval of items in a site list or library.

Draft security, in some lists and libraries, is configured to allow all site users to see both Pending and Approved versions.

When you check out a file from a library that has versioning turned on, a new version is created every time you check it back in. And, if major and minor versions are turned on, you can decide, at check-in, which type of version you are checking in. In libraries where checkout is required, versions are only created upon check-in.

In libraries where checkout is not required, a new version is created the first time you save after opening the file. Each subsequent save overwrites the version that you created with the first save. If you close the application and then reopen the document, the first save will, once again, produce a version. This can cause the number of versions to proliferate very rapidly.

For more info on check in and out, see Check out, check in, or discard changes to files in a library.

If you are co-authoring a document, do not check it out unless you have good reason to prevent others from working on the document.

When using the View in File Explorer feature to work with files, it is important to note there is a slight difference in behavior when compared to working with the browser.

In the View in File Explorer feature, renaming a file is not considered a change that triggers the creation of a new version. That means that when you change the name of the file via the View in File Explorer feature, SharePoint does not create a new version of the file but does rename the file.

However, when using the browser (or the OneDrive Sync client), renaming a file does result in the creation of a new version.

Requiring check-out can help your team make the most of versioning, because people specifically designate when a version is to be created. A version is created only when someone checks out a file, changes it, and then checks it back in. When check-out is not required, a version is created when someone first saves a file and this version is updated when the person closes it. If that person or someone else then opens and saves the file again, another version is created. Depending on the situation, you might not intend for multiple versions to be created, for example, if you must close a file to attend a meeting before you finish making changes to the file.

When check-out is required, people cannot add files, change files, or change the file properties without first checking out the file. When people check in files, they are prompted to provide comments about the changes that they made, which helps to create a more meaningful version history.

If the library will be storing Microsoft Project (.mpp) files that are synchronized with task lists on your site, the Require check-out box should be cleared.

For more info on requiring checkout, see Set up a library to require check-out of files.

Lists and libraries have permissions related to versioning and check-out that vary depending on the permission level that is applied to a user or a specific group. Someone who can edit permission levels can configure these permissions differently or can create a new group with customized permission levels.

These permissions enable flexibility in how you manage your library. For example, you may want someone to be able to delete versions of a file without having permission to delete the file itself. The permission to Delete Versions is not the same as the permission to Delete Items, so you can provide a customized level of control.

The following table shows the permissions that are related to versioning and check-out and which default permission levels they apply to.

Permission

Default permission level

View Versions

Full Control, Design, Contribute, and Read

Delete Versions

Full Control, Design, and Contribute

Override Check-Out

Full Control and Design

Approve Items

Full Control and Design

For more info on permissions, see Understanding permission levels.

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