For most users, stopping at (unregistering distros and disabling features) is sufficient. Steps 4–6 are for those who want a deep clean or are troubleshooting severe issues. Last updated: 2025

Uninstalling WSL is not a single click. It involves removing the Linux distributions, the WSL components themselves, and cleaning up leftover files and registry entries. This guide provides a complete, safe method to remove everything WSL-related. If you have any important files, scripts, or configuration data inside your Linux distribution(s), back them up now . Uninstalling will permanently delete all Linux files, home directories, and installed packages.

Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) is a powerful tool that allows you to run a GNU/Linux environment directly on Windows. However, you may eventually need to remove it—whether to free up disk space, fix a corrupted installation, or simply because you no longer use it.

wsl --export <DistributionName> <Filename>.tar # Example: wsl --export Ubuntu-22.04 ubuntu_backup.tar You can later re-import it with wsl --import . First, open PowerShell or Windows Terminal as Administrator (right-click Start > "Windows Terminal (Admin)" or "PowerShell (Admin)").

wsl -l -v For each distribution listed, unregister (remove) it:

List your installed distributions: