Turns out java has been moved into brew core recently, so the correct command as of August 2022 is:

brew install java

Then check your installation by running

java -version

If the result does not looks like this:

openjdk 18.0.2 2022-07-19
OpenJDK Runtime Environment Homebrew (build 18.0.2+0)
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM Homebrew (build 18.0.2+0, mixed mode, sharing)

but like this:

The operation couldn’t be completed. Unable to locate a Java Runtime.
Please visit http://www.java.com for information on installing Java.

Then you also need to create a symlink for the system Java wrappers to find this JDK:

sudo ln -sfn /opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk/libexec/openjdk.jdk \
     /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/openjdk.jdk
Answer from Tim Fulmer on Stack Overflow

Turns out java has been moved into brew core recently, so the correct command as of August 2022 is:

brew install java

Then check your installation by running

java -version

If the result does not looks like this:

openjdk 18.0.2 2022-07-19
OpenJDK Runtime Environment Homebrew (build 18.0.2+0)
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM Homebrew (build 18.0.2+0, mixed mode, sharing)

but like this:

The operation couldn’t be completed. Unable to locate a Java Runtime.
Please visit http://www.java.com for information on installing Java.

Then you also need to create a symlink for the system Java wrappers to find this JDK:

sudo ln -sfn /opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk/libexec/openjdk.jdk \
     /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/openjdk.jdk
Answer from Tim Fulmer on Stack Overflow
🌐
DevQA
devqa.io › brew-install-java
How to Use Brew to Install Java on Mac
In this article we show how to install Java on Mac using Homebrew, and how to allow to switch between different versions such as Java8, Java11, Java13 and latest Java version. Before we start, make sure you have Homebrew installed on your Mac. If not, you can install it via: $ ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)" If you already have brew installed, make sure you have the latest version by running the following command in a terminal
🌐
Homebrew
formulae.brew.sh › formula › openjdk
Homebrew Formulae: openjdk
brew install openjdk · Also known as: java, openjdk@26 · Development kit for the Java programming language · https://openjdk.org/ License: GPL-2.0-only WITH Classpath-exception-2.0 · Development: Pull requests · Formula JSON API: /api/formula/openjdk.json ·
🌐
GitHub
gist.github.com › gwpantazes › 50810d5635fc2e053ad117b39b597a14
How to install different JDK versions on MacOS with Homebrew · GitHub
Note that it's poured from the OpenJDK formula. $ brew install openjdk@11 # Install OpenJDK 11 · Homebrew does not offer an obvious way to install an older feature release of Java other than the current generally-available feature release.
🌐
Adam the Automator
adamtheautomator.com › install-java-on-mac
How to Install Java on Mac
November 30, 2022 - Getting detailed information about the java formula · 4. Now, run the following brew install command to install java on your Mac.
🌐
Homebrew
formulae.brew.sh › cask › temurin@19
temurin@19 — Homebrew Formulae
brew install --cask temurin@19 · Name: Eclipse Temurin Java Development Kit · JDK from the Eclipse Foundation (Adoptium) https://adoptium.net/ Development: Pull requests · Cask JSON API: /api/cask/temurin@19.json · Cask code: temurin@19.rb ...
🌐
Andrew Hoog
andrewhoog.com › posts › 3-ways-to-install-java-on-macos-2023
3 ways to install Java on macOS [2023] - Don't Panic
January 12, 2023 - $ sudo ln -sfn /opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk/libexec/openjdk.jdk /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/openjdk.jdk $ java -version ... openjdk version "19.0.1" 2022-10-18 OpenJDK Runtime Environment Homebrew (build 19.0.1) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM Homebrew (build 19.0.1, mixed mode, sharing) For the last option, we’ll try SDKMAN! which is a tool I’ve not used to date (side note: I hate having to capitalized and use an exclamation point every time I reference to tool!). Unlike brew’s broad approach, SDKMAN! is tightly focused on installing and managing SDKs:
Find elsewhere
🌐
Medium
medium.com › @haroldfinch01 › step-by-step-guide-installing-and-switching-java-versions-on-mac-osx-f3896b9872f4
Step-by-Step Guide: Installing and Switching Java Versions on Mac OSX | by Harold Finch | Medium
May 21, 2024 - Install Java 8 · brew install openjdk@8 · Install Java 11 · brew install openjdk@11 · Install Java 17 · brew install openjdk@17 · After installing each version, follow the instructions provided by Homebrew to add the Java versions to your PATH. jenv is a Java environment manager that makes it easy to switch between different versions of Java.
🌐
Medium
medium.com › @manvendrapsingh › installing-many-jdk-versions-on-macos-dfc177bc8c2b
Installing & switching between multiple JDK on macOS | by Manvendra P Singh | Medium
February 20, 2023 - After this completes, we can use homebrew to install available formulae or cask with just one line commands brew install xxxx or brew install --cask xxxx · First, let's search Homebrew to find available java versions.
🌐
Mkyong
mkyong.com › home › java › how to install java jdk on macos
How to install Java JDK on macOS - Mkyong.com
January 19, 2021 - You have to set JAVA_HOME in ~/.zprofile ... Article is updated with zsh script. ... Thank you sooooo much. It helped me a lot. God bless you. Keep up the good work. ... Very useful If you have problems with brew because AdoptOpenJDKXX is present in both casks, use “brew cask install adoptopenjdk/openjdk/adoptopenjdkXX”
🌐
Mr N
bigsoft.co.uk › blog › 2025 › 11 › 07 › installing-all-the-javas-on-a-mac-and-switching-between-them
Installing all the Javas on a Mac and switching between them
November 7, 2025 - brew install openjdk@8 brew install openjdk@11 brew install openjdk@17 brew install openjdk@21 brew install openjdk@25 ... After the install has completed add this to your ~/.bash_profile and restart the shell. export PATH="$HOME/.jenv/bin:$PATH" eval "$(jenv init -)" If you'd like JAVA_HOME ...
🌐
Mac Install Guide
mac.install.guide › java › brew-cask
Brew Install Java - Easy Cask Method · 2026
Brew install Java on Mac. One command to install the recommended Temurin JDK. The cask method without PATH or symlink configuration. How to fix common Homebrew Java issues.
🌐
Homebrew
formulae.brew.sh › cask › oracle-jdk
Homebrew Formulae: oracle-jdk
brew install --cask oracle-jdk · Name: Oracle Java Standard Edition Development Kit · JDK from Oracle · https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/downloads/ Development: Pull requests · Cask JSON API: /api/cask/oracle-jdk.json · Cask code: ...
Top answer
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407

In 2024, even if you can use just brew..

Copybrew install openjdk@17 

Java will be installed here:

Copy/opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk@17/bin/java

for Apple Intel path is /usr/local/... rather than /opt/homebrew/...

For the system Java wrappers to find this JDK, symlink it with:

Copysudo ln -sfn /opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk\@17/libexec/openjdk.jdk /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/openjdk.jdk

resp. for Intel

Copysudo ln -sfn /usr/local/opt/openjdk@17/libexec/openjdk.jdk /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/openjdk.jdk

Now, running /usr/libexec/java_home -V should show the path to JAVA 17, something like:

Copy17.0.9 (x86_64) "Homebrew" - "OpenJDK 17.0.9" /opt/homebrew/Cellar/openjdk@17/17.0.9/libexec/openjdk.jdk/Contents/Home

(This is what you are missing btw, if javac or javac --version does not give you a command-not-found but an The operation couldn’t be completed. Unable to locate a Java Runtime.)

In case you see the wrong version, check if the path to JAVA_HOME is set correctly. If not, you could set it by:

Copyexport JAVA_HOME=\$(/usr/libexec/java_home)

...give a try to sdkman, it's far better than brew

Copycurl -s "https://get.sdkman.io" | bash

then open a new shell and try list to see what you could install ;-)

Copysdk list java 

At time of writing you could use:

Copysdk install java 17.0.4.1-tem

Java will be installed here:

Copy/Users/YOUR_USERNAME_HERE/.sdkman/candidates/java/17.0.4.1-tem
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56

Java doesn't mind if you install multiple versions. This is often required; java is not backwards compatible (it tries to change little, but e.g. the java8 to java9 transition broke a ton of stuff, much of it needless and much of it not reasonably expectable or fixable by libraries and apps, so a bunch of java apps and libraries only run on java8 - just an example).

So, yes, you have installed JDK17. Also, yes, if you just run java without specifying which one you want, you so happen to get java13 here.

To see all installed javas, you can run:

Copy/usr/libexec/java_home -V

to 'override', you can use something like (depends on which shell you're using on your mac):

Copyexport JAVA_HOME=`/usr/libexec/java_home -v 17`

(the backticks mean: Run this then take the output of it and treat that as the 'value' of the expression. here, assign it to the JAVA_HOME env var. -v 17 requests a path to java 17. The -V option lists all and is meant for your eyeballs, not for scripts. The -v option is mostly for scripting, and that's how we're using it here).

JAVA_HOME decides which java is used by some things, but the java you get when you just type java is /usr/bin/java, and that executable is actually just a wrapper that picks a java to run from amongst all installed versions. It uses JAVA_HOME to decide which java to actually run. There are wrappers for all the common commands (javac, too). You can always run e.g. which javac to see what that actually runs; you probably see /usr/bin/javac. Everything in /usr/bin is one of these wrapper thingies that looks at JAVA_HOME and then runs the binary it finds there.

🌐
Medium
ymkfelix.medium.com › how-to-set-up-multiple-java-versions-on-a-macbook-8bae41345f72
How to set up multiple Java versions on a MacBook? | by Ye Min Ko | Medium
August 13, 2024 - For example, if you want to use java 17 and 21, install them with the following command. brew install openjdk@17 brew install openjdk@21 · Just run the commands after installing both versions of Java to create symlinks.
Top answer
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1214

Note: These solutions work for various versions of Java including Java 8 through Java 21 (the LTS version). This includes alternative JDK's from OpenJDK, Oracle, IBM, Azul, Amazon Correto, Graal and more.

You have a few options for how to do the installation as well as manage JDK switching. Installation can be done by Homebrew, SDKMAN, asdf, or a manual install. Switching can be done by SDKMAN, asdf, or manually by setting JAVA_HOME. All of these are described below.


TL;DR - Preferred Methods of Installation

You can install Java using whatever method you prefer including SDKMAN, asdf, Homebrew, or a manual install of the tar.gz file. The advantage of a manual install is that the location of the JDK can be placed in a standardized location for Mac OSX.

However, there are easier options such as SDKMAN and asdf that also will install other important and common tools for the JVM. These two primary options are described here.

Installing and Switching versions with SDKMAN

SDKMAN is a bit different and handles both the install and the switching. SDKMAN also places the installed JDK's into its own directory tree, which is typically ~/.sdkman/candidates/java. SDKMAN allows setting a global default version, and a version specific to the current shell.

  1. Install SDKMAN from https://sdkman.io/install

  2. List the Java versions available to make sure you know the version ID

    sdk list java
    
  3. Install one of those versions, for example, Java 21 LTS:

    sdk install java 21-open 
    

    Or java 19:

    sdk install java 19.0.2-open
    
  4. Make Java 17 the default version:

    sdk default java 17-open
    

    Or switch to 17 for the current terminal session:

    sdk use java 17-open
    

When you list available versions for installation using the list command, you will see a wide variety of distributions of Java:

sdk list java

And install additional versions, such as JDK 11 from Amazon:

sdk install java 11.0.14.10.1-amzn

SDKMAN can work with previously installed existing versions. Just do a local install giving your own version label and the location of the JDK:

sdk install java my-local-13 /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk-13.jdk/Contents/Home

And use it freely:

sdk use java my-local-13

SDKMAN will automatically manage your PATH and JAVA_HOME for you as you change versions. And as a note, it installs Java versions to ~/.sdkman/candidates/java/.

More information is available in the SDKMAN Usage Guide along with other SDK's it can install and manage such as Gradle, Maven, Kotlin, Quarkus, Spring Boot, and many others.


Installing and Switching versions with "asdf"

asdf is a version manager that supports installing and managing most languages, frameworks, and developer/devops tools. It has language specific plugins including one for Java.

  1. First, install asdf via https://asdf-vm.com/guide/getting-started.html (read there to setup your shell correctly), or more simply:

    brew reinstall asdf
    

    and read the doc for setting up your shell correctly, but if you are using asdf from Homebrew with ZSH you can execute this command to finish setup:

    echo -e "\n. $(brew --prefix asdf)/libexec/asdf.sh" >> ${ZDOTDIR:-~}/.zshrc
    
  2. Then install the Java plugin via https://github.com/halcyon/asdf-java

    asdf plugin add java
    

    and read the doc for setting up your shell correctly before continuing. Basically it says to add the following to your ~/.zshrc file (assuming you are not using another shell):

    . ~/.asdf/plugins/java/set-java-home.zsh
    
  3. Now list Java versions:

    asdf list-all java
    
  4. Install your favorite flavor and version:

    asdf install java openjdk-21
    

    or install the latest:

    asdf install java latest
    

Other important commands are...

  • List your installed versions:

    asdf list java
    
  • Set a global Java version:

    asdf global java openjdk-21
    
  • Set a local Java version for a directory:

    asdf local java openjdk-19
    

It's that easy! asdf will automatically manage your PATH and JAVA_HOME for you as you change versions. As a note, asdf installs Java versions to ~/.asdf/installs/java.

There are other languages and plugins for asdf here from the repository page: https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf-plugins


Other Methods of Installation

Install with Homebrew

The version of Java available in Homebrew Cask previous to October 3, 2018 was indeed the Oracle JVM. Now, however, it has now been updated to OpenJDK. Be sure to update Homebrew and then you will see the lastest version available for install.

  1. install Homebrew if you haven't already. Make sure it is updated:

     brew update
    
  2. Add the casks tap:

     brew tap homebrew/cask-versions
    

    These casks change their Java versions often, and there might be other taps out there with additional Java versions.

  3. Look for installable versions:

     brew search java  
    

    or for Eclipse Temurin versions:

     brew search temurin     
    
  4. Check the details on the version that will be installed:

     brew info java
    

    or for the Temurin version:

     brew info temurin
    
  5. Install a specific version of the JDK such as java11, temurin8, temurin11, temurin17, or just java or temurin for the most current of that distribution. For example:

     brew install java
    
     brew install --cask temurin
    

And these will be installed into /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/ which is the traditional location expected on Mac OSX. There might be additional steps to make the JDK active reported at the end of the install process.

Install manually from OpenJDK download page:

If you need any and every version of Java, this is a good place to look.

  1. Download OpenJDK for Mac OSX from http://jdk.java.net/ (for example Java 17 and Java 21)

  2. Unarchive the OpenJDK tar, and place the resulting folder (i.e. jdk-19.jdk) into your /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/ folder since this is the standard and expected location of JDK installs. You can also install anywhere you want in reality.

  3. Set JAVA_HOME environment variable to point at direction where you unarchived the JDK.

For further information see the answer specific to manual installation. Also see the section below "Switching versions manually" for more information on how to manage multiple manual installations.

Other installation options:

Some other flavours of OpenJDK are:

Azul Systems Java Zulu certified builds of OpenJDK can be installed by following the instructions on their site.

Zulu® is a certified build of OpenJDK that is fully compliant with the Java SE standard. Zulu is 100% open source and freely downloadable. Now Java developers, system administrators, and end-users can enjoy the full benefits of open source Java with deployment flexibility and control over upgrade timing.

Amazon Correto OpenJDK builds have an easy to use an installation package for Java 8, 11, 17, and Java 21. It installs to the standard /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/ directory on Mac OSX.

Amazon Corretto is a no-cost, multiplatform, production-ready distribution of the Open Java Development Kit (OpenJDK). Corretto comes with long-term support that will include performance enhancements and security fixes. Amazon runs Corretto internally on thousands of production services and Corretto is certified as compatible with the Java SE standard. With Corretto, you can develop and run Java applications on popular operating systems, including Linux, Windows, and macOS.

Microsoft Java JDK - certified builds of OpenJDK from Microsoft.


Where is my JDK?!?!

To find locations of previously installed Java JDK's installed at the default system locations, use:

/usr/libexec/java_home -V

Matching Java Virtual Machines (4):
19 (x86_64) "Homebrew" - "OpenJDK 19" /usr/local/Cellar/openjdk/19/libexec/openjdk.jdk/Contents/Home
18.0.1.1 (x86_64) "Homebrew" - "OpenJDK 18.0.1.1" /usr/local/Cellar/openjdk/18.0.1.1/libexec/openjdk.jdk/Contents/Home
17 (x86_64) "Homebrew" - "OpenJDK 17" /usr/local/Cellar/openjdk/17/libexec/openjdk.jdk/Contents/Home
11, x86_64: "Java SE 11" /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk-11.jdk/Contents/Home
1.8.301.09 (x86_64) "Oracle Corporation" - "Java" /Library/Internet Plug-Ins/JavaAppletPlugin.plugin/Contents/Home /usr/local/Cellar/openjdk/17/libexec/openjdk.jdk/Contents/Home

You can also report just the location of a specific Java version using -v. For example for Java 17:

/usr/libexec/java_home -v 17

/usr/local/Cellar/openjdk/17/libexec/openjdk.jdk/Contents/Home

Knowing the location of the installed JDK's is also useful when using tools like JEnv, or adding a local install manually to SDKMAN -- and you need to know where to find them.

If you need to find JDK's installed by other tools, check these locations:

  • SDKMAN installs to ~/.sdkman/candidates/java/
  • asdf install to ~/.asdf/installs/java

Version Switching

If you are using SDKMAN or asdf you are already covered and can stop reading! Otherwise, here are some options to switch existing VM installations.

Switching versions manually

The Java executable is a wrapper that will use whatever JDK is configured in JAVA_HOME, so you can change that to also change which JDK is in use.

For example, if you installed or untar'd JDK 16 to /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk-16.jdk if it is the highest version number it should already be the default, if not you could simply set:

export JAVA_HOME=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk-16.jdk/Contents/Home

And now whatever Java executable is in the path will see this and use the correct JDK.

A simple way to change JDKs is to create a function in your ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc file:

jdk() {
    version=$1
    export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home -v"$version");
    java -version
}

And then change JDKs simply by:

jdk 1.8
jdk 9
jdk 11
jdk 13

Edits:

  • removed Jabba and JENV as both appear to have stagnated, issue count is climbing dramatically, and issues/PR's are not being addressed by the maintainers.
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41

This is how I did it.

Step 1: Install Java 11

You can download Java 11 dmg for mac from here: https://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jdk11-downloads-5066655.html

Step 2: After installation of Java 11. Confirm installation of all versions. Type the following command in your terminal.

/usr/libexec/java_home -V

Step 3: Edit .bash_profile

sudo nano ~/.bash_profile

Step 4: Add 11.0.1 as default. (Add below line to bash_profile file).

export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home -v 11.0.1)

to switch to any version

export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home -v X.X.X)

Now Press CTRL+X to exit the bash. Press 'Y' to save changes.

Step 5: Reload bash_profile

source ~/.bash_profile

Step 6: Confirm current version of Java

java -version