Deleted files are not immediately gone β they're hidden from view but the data usually remains on the drive until overwritten. Here's how to recover them, in order from simplest to most technical.
Step 1: Check the Recycle Bin
Open the Recycle Bin on your desktop. Files deleted with the Delete key go here first. Right-click and Restore to return them to their original location. This works unless you've already emptied the bin.
Step 2: Check Previous Versions
Right-click a folder where the file was, select Properties β Previous Versions. If Windows File History or System Restore was enabled, you may find earlier versions of the folder with your file intact.
Step 3: Check Cloud Sync Trash
If your files were in a OneDrive, Google Drive or Dropbox folder, check the cloud service's own recycle bin online. Cloud services typically retain deleted files for 30β180 days depending on your plan.
Step 4: Stop Using the Drive
If the above steps don't find your file, the most important thing you can do is stop using the drive. Every file you save, every website you visit, every application update β all of these write data that may overwrite the deleted file you're trying to recover. The less the drive is used after deletion, the higher the recovery chance.
Step 5: Use Recovery Software
Free tools like Recuva (Windows) or TestDisk/PhotoRec (all platforms) scan the drive for recoverable files. Run them from a USB boot drive, not from the target drive itself. These tools work well for recently deleted files on mechanical hard drives but are less effective on SSDs (which often zero deleted data immediately).
When to Call a Professional
If the drive has physically failed β clicking, not recognised, burnt smell β stop immediately. Physical data recovery requires a cleanroom environment and specialised equipment. DIY attempts on a failing drive make professional recovery harder and more expensive. We offer professional data recovery across Melbourne.