Choose a permission mode
> ## Documentation Index > Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://code.claude.com/docs/llms.txt > Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Overview
Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://code.claude.com/docs/llms.txt Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Choose a permission mode
Control whether Claude asks before editing files or running commands. Cycle modes with Shift+Tab in the CLI or use the mode selector in VS Code, Desktop, and claude.ai.
When Claude wants to edit a file, run a shell command, or make a network request, it pauses and asks you to approve the action. Permission modes control how often that pause happens. The mode you pick shapes the flow of a session: default mode has you review each action as it comes, while looser modes let Claude work in longer uninterrupted stretches and report back when done. Pick more oversight for sensitive work, or fewer interruptions when you trust the direction.
Available modes
Each mode makes a different tradeoff between convenience and oversight. The table below shows what Claude can do without a permission prompt in each mode.
| Mode | What runs without asking | Best for |
|---|---|---|
default | Reads only | Getting started, sensitive work |
acceptEdits | Reads, file edits, and common filesystem commands (mkdir, touch, mv, cp, etc.) | Iterating on code you're reviewing |
plan | Reads only | Exploring a codebase before changing it |
auto | Everything, with background safety checks | Long tasks, reducing prompt fatigue |
dontAsk | Only pre-approved tools | Locked-down CI and scripts |
bypassPermissions | Everything except protected paths | Isolated containers and VMs only |
Regardless of mode, writes to protected paths are never auto-approved, guarding repository state and Claude's own configuration against accidental corruption.
Modes set the baseline. Layer permission rules on top to pre-approve or block specific tools in any mode except bypassPermissions, which skips the permission layer entirely.
Switch permission modes
You can switch modes mid-session, at startup, or as a persistent default. The mode is set through these controls, not by asking Claude in chat. Select your interface below to see how to change it.
**During a session**: press `Shift+Tab` to cycle `default` → `acceptEdits` → `plan`. The current mode appears in the status bar. Not every mode is in the default cycle:
* `auto`: appears when your account meets the [auto mode requirements](#eliminate-prompts-with-auto-mode); cycling to auto shows an opt-in prompt until you accept it, or select **No, don't ask again** to remove auto from the cycle
* `bypassPermissions`: appears after you start with `--permission-mode bypassPermissions`, `--dangerously-skip-permissions`, or `--allow-dangerously-skip-permissions`; the `--allow-` variant adds the mode to the cycle without activating it
* `dontAsk`: never appears in the cycle; set it with `--permission-mode dontAsk`
Enabled optional modes slot in after `plan`, with `bypassPermissions` first and `auto` last. If you have both enabled, you will cycle through `bypassPermissions` on the way to `auto`.
**At startup**: pass the mode as a flag.
```bash theme={null}
claude --permission-mode plan
```
**As a default**: set `defaultMode` in [settings](/en/settings#settings-files).
```json theme={null}
{
"permissions": {
"defaultMode": "acceptEdits"
}
}
```
The same `--permission-mode` flag works with `-p` for [non-interactive runs](/en/headless).
**During a session**: click the mode indicator at the bottom of the prompt box.
**As a default**: set `claudeCode.initialPermissionMode` in VS Code settings, or use the Claude Code extension settings panel.
The mode indicator shows these labels, mapped to the mode each one applies:
| UI label | Mode |
| :----------------- | :------------------ |
| Ask before edits | `default` |
| Edit automatically | `acceptEdits` |
| Plan mode | `plan` |
| Auto mode | `auto` |
| Bypass permissions | `bypassPermissions` |
Auto mode appears in the mode indicator after you enable **Allow dangerously skip permissions** in the extension settings, but it stays unavailable until your account meets every requirement listed in the [auto mode section](#eliminate-prompts-with-auto-mode). The `claudeCode.initialPermissionMode` setting does not accept `auto`; to start in auto mode by default, set `defaultMode` in your Claude Code [`settings.json`](/en/settings#settings-files) instead.
Bypass permissions also requires the **Allow dangerously skip permissions** toggle before it appears in the mode indicator.
See the [VS Code guide](/en/vs-code) for extension-specific details.
The JetBrains plugin runs Claude Code in the IDE terminal, so switching modes works the same as in the CLI: press `Shift+Tab` to cycle, or pass `--permission-mode` when launching.
Use the mode selector next to the send button. Auto and Bypass permissions appear only after you enable them in Desktop settings. See the [Desktop guide](/en/desktop#choose-a-permission-mode).
Use the mode dropdown next to the prompt box on [claude.ai/code](https://claude.ai/code) or in the mobile app. Permission prompts appear in claude.ai for approval. Which modes appear depends on where the session runs:
* **Cloud sessions** on [Claude Code on the web](/en/claude-code-on-the-web): Auto accept edits and Plan mode. Ask permissions, Auto, and Bypass permissions are not available.
* **[Remote Control](/en/remote-control) sessions** on your local machine: Ask permissions, Auto accept edits, and Plan mode. Auto and Bypass permissions are not available.
For Remote Control, you can also set the starting mode when launching the host:
```bash theme={null}
claude remote-control --permission-mode acceptEdits
```
Auto-approve file edits with acceptEdits mode
acceptEdits mode lets Claude create and edit files in your working directory without prompting. The status bar shows ⏵⏵ accept edits on while this mode is active.
In addition to file edits, acceptEdits mode auto-approves common filesystem Bash commands: mkdir, touch, rm, rmdir, mv, cp, and sed. These commands are also auto-approved when prefixed with safe environment variables such as LANG=C or NO_COLOR=1, or process wrappers such as timeout, nice, or nohup. Like file edits, auto-approval applies only to paths inside your working directory or additionalDirectories. Paths outside that scope, writes to protected paths, and all other Bash commands still prompt.
Use acceptEdits when you want to review changes in your editor or via git diff after the fact rather than approving each edit inline. Press Shift+Tab once from default mode to enter it, or start with it directly:
claude --permission-mode acceptEdits
Analyze before you edit with plan mode
Plan mode tells Claude to research and propose changes without making them. Claude reads files, runs shell commands to explore, and writes a plan, but does not edit your source. Permission prompts still apply the same as default mode.
Enter plan mode by pressing Shift+Tab or prefixing a single prompt with /plan. You can also start in plan mode from the CLI:
claude --permission-mode plan
Press Shift+Tab again to leave plan mode without approving a plan.
When the plan is ready, Claude presents it and asks how to proceed. From that prompt you can:
- Approve and start in auto mode
- Approve and accept edits
- Approve and review each edit manually
- Keep planning with feedback
- Refine with Ultraplan for browser-based review
Each approve option also offers to clear the planning context first.
Eliminate prompts with auto mode
Auto mode requires Claude Code v2.1.83 or later.
Auto mode lets Claude execute without permission prompts. A separate classifier model reviews actions before they run, blocking anything that escalates beyond your request, targets unrecognized infrastructure, or appears driven by hostile content Claude read.
Auto mode is a research preview. It reduces prompts but does not guarantee safety. Use it for tasks where you trust the general direction, not as a replacement for review on sensitive operations.
Auto mode is available only when your account meets all of these requirements:
- Plan: Max, Team, Enterprise, or API. Not available on Pro.
- Admin: on Team and Enterprise, an admin must enable it in Claude Code admin settings before users can turn it on. Admins can also lock it off by setting
permissions.disableAutoModeto"disable"in managed settings. - Model: Claude Sonnet 4.6, Opus 4.6, or Opus 4.7 on Team, Enterprise, and API plans; Claude Opus 4.7 only on Max plans. Other models, including Haiku and claude-3 models, are not supported.
- Provider: Anthropic API only. Not available on Bedrock, Vertex, or Foundry.
If Claude Code reports auto mode as unavailable, one of these requirements is unmet; this is not a transient outage. A separate message that names a model and says auto mode "cannot determine the safety" of an action is a transient classifier outage; see the error reference.
What the classifier blocks by default
The classifier trusts your working directory and your repo's configured remotes. Everything else is treated as external until you configure trusted infrastructure.
Blocked by default:
- Downloading and executing code, like
curl | bash - Sending sensitive data to external endpoints
- Production deploys and migrations
- Mass deletion on cloud storage
- Granting IAM or repo permissions
- Modifying shared infrastructure
- Irreversibly destroying files that existed before the session
- Force push, or pushing directly to
main
Allowed by default:
- Local file operations in your working directory
- Installing dependencies declared in your lock files or manifests
- Reading
.envand sending credentials to their matching API - Read-only HTTP requests
- Pushing to the branch you started on or one Claude created
Sandbox network access requests are routed through the classifier rather than allowed by default. Run claude auto-mode defaults to see the full rule lists. If routine actions get blocked, an administrator can add trusted repos, buckets, and services via the autoMode.environment setting: see Configure auto mode.
Boundaries you state in conversation
The classifier treats boundaries you state in the conversation as a block signal. If you tell Claude "don't push" or "wait until I review before deploying", the classifier blocks matching actions even when the default rules would allow them. A boundary stays in force until you lift it in a later message. Claude's own judgment that a condition was met does not lift it.
Boundaries are not stored as rules. The classifier re-reads them from the transcript on each check, so a boundary can be lost if context compaction removes the message that stated it. For a hard guarantee, add a deny rule instead.
When auto mode falls back
Each denied action shows a notification and appears in /permissions under the Recently denied tab, where you can press r to retry it with a manual approval.
If the classifier blocks an action 3 times in a row or 20 times total, auto mode pauses and Claude Code resumes prompting. Approving the prompted action resumes auto mode. These thresholds are not configurable. Any allowed action resets the consecutive counter, while the total counter persists for the session and resets only when its own limit triggers a fallback.
In non-interactive mode with the -p flag, repeated blocks abort the session since there is no user to prompt.
Repeated blocks usually mean the classifier is missing context about your infrastructure. Use /feedback to report false positives, or have an administrator configure trusted infrastructure.
Each action goes through a fixed decision order. The first matching step wins:
1. Actions matching your [allow or deny rules](/en/permissions#manage-permissions) resolve immediately
2. Read-only actions and file edits in your working directory are auto-approved, except writes to [protected paths](#protected-paths)
3. Everything else goes to the classifier
4. If the classifier blocks, Claude receives the reason and tries an alternative
On entering auto mode, broad allow rules that grant arbitrary code execution are dropped:
* Blanket `Bash(*)` or `PowerShell(*)`
* Wildcarded interpreters like `Bash(python*)`
* Package-manager run commands
* `Agent` allow rules
Narrow rules like `Bash(npm test)` carry over. Dropped rules are restored when you leave auto mode.
The classifier sees user messages, tool calls, and your CLAUDE.md content. Tool results are stripped, so hostile content in a file or web page cannot manipulate it directly. A separate server-side probe scans incoming tool results and flags suspicious content before Claude reads it. For more on how these layers work together, see the [auto mode announcement](https://claude.