# Cherry Pick Multiple Commits At Once I've always thought of `git cherry-pick` as being a command that you can run against a single commit by specifying the SHA of that commit. That's how I've always used it. The man page for `git-cherry-pick` plainly states: > Given one or more existing commits, apply the change each one introduces, > recording a new commit for each. We can cherry pick multiple commits at once in a single command. They will be applied one at a time in the order listed. Here we can see an example of applying two commits to the current branch and the accompanying output as they are auto-merged. ```bash $ git cherry-pick 5206af5 6362f41 Auto-merging test/services/event_test.rb [jb/my-feature-branch 961f3deb] Use the other testing syntax Date: Fri May 2 10:50:14 2025 -0500 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) Auto-merging test/services/event_test.rb [jb/my-feature-branch b15835d0] Make other changes to the test Date: Fri May 2 10:54:48 2025 -0500 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) ``` If the commits cannot be cleanly merged, then you may need to do some manual resolution as they are applied. Or maybe you want to try including the `-Xpatience` merge strategy. See `man git-cherry-pick` for more details. Make sure to look at the _Examples_ section which contains much more advanced examples beyond what is shown above.