

Note that if you simply move the virtual machine to the Trash but don’t empty the Trash on the Mac, that VM can be recovered anytime before the Trash is emptied by simply going to the Trash, locating the vm file (usually labeled as the OS with the file extension “.pvm” like ‘Debian Linux.pvm’) and adding that VM file back into Parallels. Note: if you’re deleting a virtual machine from Parallels on Windows, you empty the Recycle Bin instead of the Trash like on the Mac. It doesn’t matter if you use the File menu or the right-click menu to delete the virtual machine, the steps are the same afterwards. Now go to the Finder and empty the Trash as usual (or right-click the Trash icon in the Mac Dock and choose “Empty Trash”)Įmptying the Trash is necessary to actually delete the virtual machine from the Mac and free up disk space on the computer.Repeat with other virtual machines you want to delete.Select “Move to Trash” to delete the virtual machine without saving anything, or choose “Keep Files” to be able to use the VM again in the future if needed.Go to the “File” menu and choose “Remove”, or alternatively right-click on the VM and choose “Remove”.Select the virtual machine you want to delete from the Control Center (if Parallels launches immediately into a VM, exit the VM and go to the main screen first).Launch Parallels or Parallels Desktop Lite, but do not start any virtual machine.How to Remove Virtual Machines in Parallels & Parallels Desktop Lite Here’s how you can easily delete a virtual machine in Parallels and remove it from the Mac (or Windows PC).
