# Change The Start Point Of A Branch More than a few times I have checked out a new branch against, say, `develop` when I instead meant to base it off `qa`. I've tried what felt like the obvious solution. ```bash ❯ git checkout qa ❯ git checkout -b new-branch fatal: A branch named 'new-branch' already exists. ``` Git won't allow this. The fix I tend to go with is to delete the branch, move to my intended starting point, and check it out anew. Here is another approach. The `git checkout` command offers the `-B` flag which will save me a step. ```bash ❯ git checkout -B new-branch Switched to and reset branch 'new-branch' ``` Use this with caution. Any commits that have been applied to the subject branch will be reset (read: wiped out) in the process. See `man git-checkout` for more details.