No Recovery Partition Windows 10

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Cecelia Seiner

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Aug 4, 2024, 10:49:08 PM8/4/24
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Recoverypartition is a special partition on system hard drive and is used to restore the system to factory settings in the event of system issues. To protect recovery partition from being changed or deleted, recovery partition usually has no drive letter, and only a Help option is provided in Disk Management.

You can delete a recovery partition without affecting the running OS. For average users, it is better to keep the recovery partition as it is in the hard drive, as such a partition won't take up too much space


If you buy a computer with Windows 10 or Windows 8 preinstalled, you will find that there is a recovery partition in Disk Management, with no drive letter and no executable functions except Help (see the image attached below).


Well, what is recovery partition? To put it simple, a recovery partition is a portion of your disk drive that is set aside by the manufacturer to hold an image of your system before it was shipped from the factory. Recovery partition contains the files of system backup image and files that guide system restoration.


However, unlike creating a normal partition, creating a recovery partition is not easy. Usually, when you buy a brand-new computer that has been pre-installed with Windows 10, you can find that recovery partition in Disk Management; but if you reinstall Windows 10, it is likely that no recovery partition can be found.


You may ask: can I delete recovery partition Windows 10? The answer is positive: you can delete recovery partition without affecting the performance of Windows 10, provided that you have made a backup or you are not planning to do factory reset when Windows runs into an error.


Luckily, we have MiniTool Partition Wizard, which can easily and safely remove recovery partition Windows 10/8/7. Here, we recommend using MiniTool Partition Wizard Free edition which is qualified to do this job, you only need to click several buttons to finish.


Within a few seconds, you will have Windows 10 recovery partition deleted. Then you can use MiniTool Partition Wizard to add this unallocated space to any partition so as to extend partition or you may just create new partition on this location.


In fact, Windows also provides you a way to delete recovery partition, that is to use Diskpart.exe to delete partitions from Diskpart command prompt. Please follow these steps to remove Windows 10 recovery partition.


So the bottom line here is: both MiniTool Partition Wizard and Diskpart are useful to delete recovery partition Windows 10. But in my opinion, the former one is easier to operate, and the latter is likely to lead to errors.


Although Diskpart is able to delete recovery partition, without a clear interface to display the details, there are chances that you may delete a wrong partition and the operations are irreversible. For those who are unfamiliar with Diskpart, obviously this is not a good choice.


After knowing how to delete recovery partition using two methods, you might be interested in whether it is possible to restore deleted Windows recovery partition. See the following part to get specific tutorial.


Sometimes, you may regret of deleting recovery partition, for you may need it to restore Windows to factory settings someday. Is it possible to restore recovery partition Windows 10? Yes, and MiniTool Partition Wizard is always the best solution.


Step 2. If you are using the Free Edition, you will see notice saying Free Edition is only capable of scanning for lost partitions. To recover, you need to upgrade software to Pro Edition. If you are already running the Pro Edition, the red notice will not show up. Now to continue, click Next.


Some users are quite indecisive on whether they need to delete the recovery partition or not. If they keep the recovery partition there, it seems that they will never have the chance to make use of it, and the disk space it occupies is wasted; if they just choose to delete it, they feel someday they need this partition to do Windows reset. In such case, it is wise to back up the recovery partition to another location before deleting recovery partition.


Reading here, you can see MiniTool Partition Wizard is really of great help to deal with issues related to recovery partition. In fact, there are more features MiniTool Partition Wizard can offer, such as merge recovery Partition Windows 10 (paid edition), move recovery partition Windows 10, explore the content of recovery partition, and so on. Now grasp this freeware to help manage you recovery partition Windows 10.


Step 3. Here you can choose how to carry out the recovery: to keep your files or to remove everything. Depending on your own needs, you should make your own decision. Then the reset process begins.


In this post, I mainly talk about what is recovery partition, how to create recovery partition, can a recovery partition be removed and how to delete it, how to back up recovery partition, etc. Hope these information are helpful. In addition, I strongly recommend using MiniTool Partition Wizard Free Edition to help you since it is free, reliable and easy to use.


Using Diskpart make the disk GPT and Partition the drive as necessary for the EFI and Restored Data: EFI/UEFI about 128 MB or what you want, assign it a letter (S:) and the rest as the OS Drive and assign it a letter (C:)


Since the disk is precisely 40GB, I am pretty sure that it is a virtual machine. Make a backup AND a checkpoint/snapshot of the virtual machine -checkpoints-alone-arent-backups/ , remove the recovery partition and extend the system drive the way you want. One more option is booting this virtual machine using GParted ISO GParted -- Download , moving the recovery partition to the end of the disk, and resize the system partition afterward.


Even if you do, you always have an option to mount a virtual disk from any other virtual machine that has a recovery partition present and use it for recovery purposes. That is not a big deal in a virtualized environment.


This update requires 250 MB of free space in the recovery partition to install successfully. If the recovery partition does not have sufficient free space, this update will fail. In this case, you will receive the following error message:


I have found all machines that I work on if you upgraded from Windows 7 to Windows 10, you may have two recovery partitions. The best way to check this is through disk management. If that is the case I had to add 250 meg to the second recovery partition at the end. This has fixed every machine I worked on. Hope this helps . I used partition manager software from Easeus


The recovery partition refers to a component of your computer hard drive that can be used to restore the system to factory settings in the event of a system failure or other problems.


Looking for effective data protection? MyDefender from IONOS performs regular virus scans and backups to keep your computer and its contents protected at all times. It is also suitable as a supplement to your existing virus protection.


Deleting the recovery partition will not have any negative impact on your running operating system. But before you go down this path, you must be aware that this process cannot be stopped or undone. All data that is on the partition will be irrevocably deleted. To be on the safe side, you should therefore create a recovery medium such as a CD or a USB stick beforehand. Many companies also resort to a cloud disaster recovery. This way, you always have a backup available.


Yes but you cannot delete recovery partition in Disk Management utility. You would have to use a third party app to do so. You might just be better off to wipe the drive and install fresh copy of windows 10 since upgrades always leave behind fun stuff to deal with in the future.


The recovery partition is usually created by the manufacture of the PC for the purpose of restoring the PC to the factory original configuration. Since you have upgraded to Windows 10, and restoring from this partition usually wipes all of your installed programs and user data anyway, I would say that it is of no use to you. So go ahead and delete it. I believe that you can delete it using diskpart. But I agree with crashlite, I would strongly consider doing a fresh install.


Diskpart will not delete the recovery partition.

Since you recently upgraded, and as others have recommended, do a clean install of Windows 10. Afterwards you will feel better.

When I upgrade a machine to 10 I do an in place upgrade then do a clean install.

Best of luck.


Even if you install Windows 10 fresh it creates this partition automatically, this will mean that if you delete it will make Windows 10 not able to do resets which as above said would make without any software but keep your data. If this is an SSD, I would adjust the Page File as it can do wear and tear on it.


You are correct, I was thinking about the OEM recovery partition and confusing it with the recovery partition created with a GPT/UEFI install. One thing though, if the OP does a clean install at least it will not be stuck in the middle of the disk.

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