--- stage: Manage group: Import info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments --- # Importing issues from CSV **(FREE)** You can import issues to a project by uploading a CSV file with the following columns: | Name | Required? | Description | |:--------------|:-----------------------|:-------------------------------------------------| | `title` | **{check-circle}** Yes | Issue title. | | `description` | **{check-circle}** Yes | Issue description. | | `due_date` | **{dotted-circle}** No | Issue due date in `YYYY-MM-DD` format. [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/91317) in GitLab 15.2. | Data in other columns is not imported. You can use the `description` field to embed [quick actions](../quick_actions.md) to add other data to the issue. For example, labels, assignees, and milestones. Alternatively, you can [move an issue](managing_issues.md#move-an-issue). Moving issues preserves more data. The user uploading the CSV file is set as the author of the imported issues. You must have at least the Developer role for a project to import issues. ## Prepare for the import - Consider importing a test file containing only a few issues. There is no way to undo a large import without using the GitLab API. - Ensure your CSV file meets the [file format](#csv-file-format) requirements. ## Import the file To import issues: 1. Go to your project's Issues list page. 1. Open the import feature, depending if the project has issues: - Existing issues are present: Select the import icon at the top right, next to **Edit issues**. - Project has no issues: Select **Import CSV** in the middle of the page. 1. Select the file you want to import, and then select **Import issues**. The file is processed in the background, and a notification email is sent to you after the import is complete. ## CSV file format To import issues, GitLab requires CSV files have a specific format: | Element | Format | |------------------------|--------| | header row | CSV files must include the following headers: `title` and `description`. The case of the headers does not matter. | | columns | Data from columns beyond `title` and `description` are not imported. | | separators | The column separator is detected from the header row. Supported separator characters are commas (`,`), semicolons (`;`), and tabs (`\t`). The row separator can be either `CRLF` or `LF`. | | double-quote character | The double-quote (`"`) character is used to quote fields, enabling the use of the column separator in a field (see the third line in the sample CSV data below). To insert a double-quote (`"`) in a quoted field use two double-quote characters in succession (`""`). | | data rows | After the header row, following rows must use the same column order. The issue title is required, but the description is optional. | If you have special characters (for example, `,` or `\n`) or multiple lines in a field (for example, when using [quick actions](../quick_actions.md)), surround the characters with double quotes (`"`). When using [quick actions](../quick_actions.md), each action must be on a separate line. Sample CSV data: ```plaintext title,description,due date My Issue Title,My Issue Description,2022-06-28 Another Title,"A description, with a comma", "One More Title","One More Description", An Issue with Quick Actions,"Hey can we change the frontend? /assign @sjones /label ~frontend ~documentation", ``` ### File size The limit depends on how your GitLab instance is hosted: - Self-managed: Set by the configuration value of `Max Attachment Size` for the GitLab instance. - GitLab SaaS: On GitLab.com, it's set to 10 MB.