Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) introduces auxiliary parameters for each layer to fine-tune the pre-trained model under limited computing resources. But it still faces challenges of resource consumption when scaling up to larger models. Previous studies employ pruning techniques by evaluating the importance of LoRA parameters for different layers to address the problem. However, these efforts only analyzed parameter features to evaluate their importance. Indeed, the output of LoRA related to the parameters and data is the factor that directly impacts the frozen model. To this end, we propose LoRA-drop which evaluates the importance of the parameters by analyzing the LoRA output. We retain LoRA for important layers and the LoRA of the other layers share the same parameters. Abundant experiments on NLU and NLG tasks demonstrate the effectiveness of LoRA-drop.