Windows 8 Tip: Create Recovery Media

When you install or upgrade to Windows 8, or receive a new Windows 8-based PC, one of the first things you should do is create recovery media, providing you with an alternate way to boot the PC and run recovery tools should something go wrong. This process has changed a bit since Windows 7, and now works with both USB-based recovery media as well as disc-based media.

To find the Windows 8 recovery media creator, enter recovery in Start Search and then change the view to Settings. The option you’re looking for is listed as Create a recovery drive in the search results.

search

The Recovery Media Creator is a desktop-based wizard that will enable you to create recovery media. (Note that you will need a version of this disk that is the same 'bit-ness' as is the version of Windows you're using. So if you are using a 32-bit version of Windows, you will need a 32-bit version of the recovery media as well. If it's 64-bit, you need a 64-bit version of the recovery media. This will happen automatically when you create the media, but it means that you can't necessarily share this media with other PCs, if they're using a different 'bit-ness' version of Windows.)

wizard1

After clicking Next, you’ll be prompted to connect a USB flash drive, or you’ll see a list of available drives. If you’d rather use optical media (CD-RW or recordable DVD), you can click the link titled Create a system repair disk with a CD or DVD instead. (This was the only option in Windows 7.) Here, I’ll assume you’re using a USB device, since that’s new to Windows 8.

wizard2

After selecting the drive, click Next. The wizard will warn you that everything on the drive will be deleted as part of the formatting process. Click Create.

The wizard will prepare and format the drive, and then copy over the utilities and other files that make up the recovery environment.

wizard3

And … that’s it. If your PC isn’t booting properly, you can boot it from the recovery media to access a recovery environment that includes several useful tools.

recover-screens

Note that there are also other ways to access these recovery tools, and that the recovery media, in many ways, is a prudent, “just in case” last resort. If you have Windows 8 Setup media, that can be used to access the recovery tools. (On the Install Now screen, simply click Repair your computer instead.) And if you can actually boot into Windows, just navigate to PC Settings, General, and then Advanced Startup to access the exact same toolset.

 

Discuss this Article 16

ebraiter
on Aug 28, 2012
Unsure why anyone would waste an 8GB USB key [or maybe 16GB if an image from dell, HP, ...] for a recovery media.
SterlingE
on Dec 4, 2012

Use a 1 gb USB key. That should set you back about $2.50 USD.

jlua001
on Dec 7, 2012

You say that instead of using a USB key, and I quote: "you can click the link titled Create a system repair disk with a CD or DVD instead". Well, as far as I can tell that link did exist on the Windows 7 Create Recovery Media dialog. However, it doesn´t seem to exist on the Windows 8 Create Recovery Media dialog; or, at least, not on my two Windows 8 computers... Anyone knows why?

cwomack
on Dec 11, 2012

jlua001, at first I thought the same thing. But in the first step of the Create Recovery Drive window, you'll see an option checked by default to copy the Restore partition files to the recovery drive. When I unchecked this, the create repair disk on CD/DVD appeared.

Bulldog
on Dec 24, 2012

Even though USB drives are convenient and probably load faster than optical media, they're also harder to lose, because they're so small, and for the same reason they're difficult to label.

martin2handy@ya...
on Dec 27, 2012

Being such a small amount of data perhaps is not the actual windows program itself though. Supposing i drop my laptop, bugger the drive, put a totally new drive in... NO WINDOWS DISC THAT I PAID for. now what? Will this recovery thing work with nothing on the new drive?? Previously, with the Vista one and the XP before that... I just reloaded it all and off I went...

mutantspunk
on Jan 8, 2013

If you want to create a full recovery disk (i.e. copy the computers existing recovery partition) - the target drive has to be a minimum of 32GB!!! When I bought Win8, it came on a DVD. Why do you need anything more than an 8GB (or mayyyyyyyyyyybe a 16GB if the DVD is dual-layer) drive to create an adequate recovery drive?

But thanks for the article. It was clear and concise.

krok
on Jan 11, 2013

See http://winsupersite.com/windows-8/windows-8-tip-use-windows-7-system-ima... for how to make your own windows restore disc. I reproduce my comment here:

1)Press [Win-Logo]+[R]
2)type in "control.exe /name Microsoft.Recovery"
3)in the 'search box' top right, type "Windows 7"
4)Select "Windows 7 File Recovery"
5)FORMAT A BLANK DVD using default settings, insert it..
6)Continue , selecting "create system image"

Step 5 is necessary because Windows 8 has a bug that may trigger if the first disk is not pre-formatted. The rest of the disks dont have to be formatted.

morpheus
on Jan 11, 2013

Hi there ! This procedure is noce, and I tested it ... but the RESTORE from the USB key is not working.

When you boot your computer with the USB key inserted, you will effectively see a menu allowing you to boot from this USB key, then you will go to a "blue" menu askig you for the language then keyboard ... then you will go back to the "standard" blue "Trouble Shoot" and "Advanced options" menu ...

If you select again the "use a peripheral" from this blue menu thinking about booting from the USB key you created with this procedure it will again just ask you for the Language and Keyboard, then again come back to the blue menus.

Have you tested it ???

roughneck
on Jan 13, 2013

The Advanced Options screen displayed near the end of the article has an option labeled "Startup Settings". My USB Recovery Drive does not include that option--it has everything else, but not that one. The fact is my USB Recovery Drive appears to be identical in content and format to my Repair disc CD--they both have the same menus and options and are both 188 MB in size.

I'm puzzled as I thought Repair Discs and Recovery Drives were suppose to be two different animals. Mine appear to have identical content and neither of them has the "Startup Settings" options on the "Advanced Options" menu/window as shown in this article.

teamofna
on Jan 31, 2013

I have the exact same issue. I also tried using a cd, but it would not even boot from the cd. It is great when they sell products, do not provide restore cd (except as additional charge), then not even make sure the process to create a restore disks works.

deval
on Feb 6, 2013

i ve 2 laptop same model , in 1 laptop os windows 8 and secone one windows 7 , so i can use windows 8 recovery cd to use to setup windows 8 in windows 7 laptop , i ve no os installation cd windows 8 .

byckling
on Feb 10, 2013

I used to make Windows 8 recovery media to a memory stick of 16 Gbyte in USB. It took 17 hours to make it! Is this normal or did I do something wrong?

doncirelli
on Feb 18, 2013

Here is the correct "quick and easy" way to create a recovery disc in Windows 8, using a CD-R or DVD-R:

Press Windows-q to open the application search menu. If you are on the desktop, you are automatically switched to the search interface on the start screen.
Enter recdisc and hit return afterwards. This loads a menu on the desktop that you can use to create the disc.
Enter a blank CD or DVD into a CD writer connected to the computer and select its drive letter if it is not selected already.
It should not take longer than a couple of minutes to create the repair disc. If you have a fast CD or DVD writer, it should complete in less than a minute.

justin1989
on Feb 19, 2013

i have windows eight laptop and need reboot it but have no disc is it possible to be able to do it without then

Iceqube
on Feb 22, 2013

Does the windows 8 recovery disc have to be re-created every so often or is it good forever?
Thank you

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