Nextcloud is a suite of client-server software for creating and using file hosting services. It is enterprise-ready with comprehensive support options. It is licensed with Affero General Public License v3.0 (AGPL-v3.0).

Release Released Security Support Latest
28 4 months and 1 week ago
(11 Dec 2023)
Ends in 8 months
(31 Dec 2024)
28.0.4
(28 Mar 2024)
27 10 months ago
(12 Jun 2023)
Ends in 2 months and 1 week
(30 Jun 2024)
27.1.8
(28 Mar 2024)
26 1 year ago
(21 Mar 2023)
Ended 3 weeks ago
(31 Mar 2024)
26.0.13
(28 Mar 2024)
25 1 year and 6 months ago
(18 Oct 2022)
Ended 5 months and 3 weeks ago
(31 Oct 2023)
25.0.13
(26 Oct 2023)
24 1 year and 11 months ago
(02 May 2022)
Ended 11 months ago
(30 Apr 2023)
24.0.12
(19 Apr 2023)
23 2 years and 4 months ago
(26 Nov 2021)
Ended 1 year and 3 months ago
(31 Dec 2022)
23.0.12
(08 Dec 2022)
22 2 years and 9 months ago
(05 Jul 2021)
Ended 1 year and 8 months ago
(31 Jul 2022)
22.2.10
(18 Jul 2022)
21 3 years ago
(19 Feb 2021)
Ended 2 years ago
(28 Feb 2022)
21.0.9
(15 Feb 2022)
20 3 years and 6 months ago
(02 Oct 2020)
Ended 2 years and 4 months ago
(30 Nov 2021)
20.0.14
(11 Nov 2021)
19 3 years and 11 months ago
(26 May 2020)
Ended 2 years and 9 months ago
(30 Jun 2021)
19.0.13
(01 Jul 2021)
18 4 years ago
(16 Jan 2020)
Ended 3 years ago
(31 Jan 2021)
18.0.14
(25 Jan 2021)
17 4 years and 7 months ago
(26 Sep 2019)
Ended 3 years and 5 months ago
(31 Oct 2020)
17.0.10
(08 Oct 2020)
16 5 years ago
(24 Apr 2019)
Ended 3 years and 9 months ago
(30 Jun 2020)
16.0.11
(04 Jun 2020)

Release Channels

Channel Use case
Production Only available to Nextcloud Enterprise customers
Stable Latest feature releases ready for most users at minimal risk. Rollouts are staged, making releases incrementally available to all users over time
Beta A short-term-stable point to report bugs against. Around big releases the Beta channel delivers the new major version.
Daily Daily builds are meant to reproduce bugs as well as to enable testers to follow the development of the next major version.

Upgrades

Skipping major versions when upgrading and downgrading to older versions is not supported. If you went via β€˜beta’ to 14.0.0rc4 and stable is on 13.0.5, you have to wait until 14.0.0 or later is in stable until a new update will become available.

The safest way to upgrade is to always update to the latest minor release before upgrading to a new version. The Nextcloud updater does this automatically whenever possible.

Cadence

Nextcloud makes new versions incrementally available to user installations in the Stable channel. When a major new version comes out, the project waits for one week and only when no problems are found the roll-out is started in steps of about 20% of the user base per week. If you maintain several servers, this means some get it sooner than others.

If an issue is found that was not caught during pre-release testing, the roll-out might be delayed. As a result new release is typically only available in the stable channel after the first minor release. Users can always upgrade sooner by choosing the beta channel, which typically tracks stable releases immediately after publishing.

More information is available on the Nextcloud website.

You should be running one of the supported release numbers listed above in the rightmost column.

You can check the version that you are currently using by running:
su -m www -c 'php $WEBROOT/occ config:system:get version'

You can submit an improvement to this page on GitHub :octocat: . This page has a corresponding Talk Page.

A JSON version of this page is available at /api/nextcloud.json. See the API Documentation for more information. You can subscribe to the iCalendar feed at /calendar/nextcloud.ics.