Windows 7 Recovery Disk and Repair Disc Download

Download our recovery and repair disk for Microsoft Windows 7 (also available for Windows 8, Vista, XP or Server editions) that can be used to access system restore tools.

It comes with our exclusive Automated Repair feature, option to access System Restore, tools to backup and recover your most important files, a built-in antivirus scanner and a command-line for advanced recovery options.

Download recovery disk for Windows 7

Looking for recovery disks for other Windows versions?

Easy Recovery Essentials for Windows 7

Our recovery disk supports x86 and x64 platforms and all Microsoft Windows 7 editions, including 32-bit and 64-bit editions: Ultimate, Enterprise, Professional, Home Premium, Home Basic and Starter.

Easy Recovery Essentials (or EasyRE), is a 55 to 135 MiB ISO image ready to be downloaded.

You can burn this ISO image to any CDs, DVDs or USB drives and boot from it to recover or repair your broken computer. We provided instructions on how to do this below, see Burn to CD, DVD or USB.

With the Easy Recovery Essentials you can (see list of features here):

  • Automatically find and fix errors using Automated Repair
  • Recover your PC from infections using its built-in antivirus
  • Restore your PC to a working state
  • Access and backup your most important data (like documents, pictures, music, videos and so on)

Easy Recovery Essentials comes with powerful tools that computer technicians or IT experts can use straight away:

  • Fully-featured visual partition editor
  • Scriptable command line
  • Advanced recovery options
  • Web browser

You can read more about EasyRE for computer repair professionals here.

What is a recovery and repair disk

Windows 7 LogoMajor PC manufacturers no longer give customers a real Windows 7 installation DVD along with their purchase of a computer.

A Windows 7 installation DVD can be used to recover your PC, not just install a Windows 7 copy. The DVD has a “recovery center” that gives you options to Automated Recovery (attempts to fix automatically any errors found), System Restore (restores your computer to the last working state) or you can access a command-line for advanced recovery options.

Instead, customers are expected to create a recovery media themselves – on a CD, DVD or USB drive.

Your computer’s hard drive might have a recovery partition added by the manufacturer, but what happens when your PC or Windows isn’t working or you’ve lost the disks you had?

If you can’t boot into Windows or your PC isn’t working, only a bootable recovery and repair CD/DVD/USB can save you.

Download recovery disk for Windows 7

Easy Recovery Essentials, our recovery and repair disk, uses a non-destructive repair process that can recover your PC without formatting your hard drive or reinstalling Windows.

It comes with our powerful Automated Repair feature, an antivirus scanner built-in, the ability to access System Restore, tools to browse the Internet (a web browser) and back-up your most important files (documents, videos, pictures, music and so on), memory diagnostics and a command-line tools for advanced options.

Some of its features include (see list of features here):

  • One-click Windows repair
  • System Restore
  • Web browser
  • File backup
  • Antivirus scanner
  • Partition editor

Update: Please note that this disk is no longer free, due to licensing restrictions imposed upon us.

Download Easy Recovery Essentials for Windows 7

Our recovery disk supports x86 and x64 platforms and all Microsoft Windows 7 editions:

  • Windows 7 Ultimate (32-bit and 64-bit editions)
  • Windows 7 Enterprise (32-bit and 64-bit editions)
  • Windows 7 Professional (32-bit and 64-bit editions)
  • Windows 7 Home Premium (32-bit and 64-bit editions)
  • Windows 7 Home Basic (32-bit and 64-bit editions)
  • Windows 7 Starter (32-bit edition) (Starter is available only in 32-bit)

It works with any Windows 7 that has Service Packs installed:

  • Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (SP1)

The disk is in ISO image format that you can burn to any CDs, DVDs or USB sticks and then use it as a bootable recovery CD/DVD/USB. We provided step-by-step instructions how to burn the ISO image below.

It’s a 120 MiB download file.

You cannot use a recovery or repair disk to install or reinstall Windows 7.

Burn to CD, DVD or USB

NeoSmart Technologies has published a guide on how to burn an ISO image to CD or DVD. This ISO image can be burnt to any CDs or DVDs and even USB drives.

You can burn the ISO with your favorite burning program. We published step-by-step instructions and guides on how to do this:

If you prefer to have a recovery USB instead, follow our guide on how to make a EasyRE recovery USB drive here.

Compatible with PC manufacturers

Our recovery and repair disk works with any desktop computers, workstations, laptops, notebooks, ultrabooks, netbooks or servers computers from all major PC manufacturers, Dell, Asus, IBM and more.

It works with older or no longer on the market PC brands, such as Gateway Computers or eMachines PCs.

Dell, HP

Dell recovery disk

This disk is compatible with Dell PCs and its manufactured series:

  • Adamo
  • Inspiron
  • Studio
  • Vostro
  • XPS
  • Latitude

Do you have a Dell computer running Windows 7? Read our recovery and restore guide for Dell.

HP recovery disk

Easy Recovery Essentials works with your HP computer, including any of these series and models:

  • ENVY
  • EliteBook
  • Essential Home
  • Pavilion
  • x2 models

Do you have a HP computer running Windows 7? Read our recovery and restore guide for HP.

Asus, Acer

Asus recovery disk

It works with any Asus computer model that runs any of the following Windows versions:

  • Windows 8
  • Windows 7
  • Windows Vista
  • Windows XP
  • Windows Server 2003, Server 2008 and Server 2012

Do you have an Asus computer running Windows 7? Read our recovery and restore guide for Asus.

Acer recovery disk

Acer users can download our disk. It’s compatible with all Acer models:

  • Desktops models: Aspire M and T, Aspire X and Predator G
  • Notebooks models: Aspire R, Aspire V3 and Aspire E
  • Netbooks and ultra-thin computer models: Aspire S7, Aspire S5, Aspire S3, Aspire P, Aspire M, Aspire V7, Aspire V5
  • Netbooks models: Aspire One

Do you have an Acer computer running Windows 7? Read our recovery and restore guide for Acer.

Lenovo, Toshiba, Samsung

Lenovo

Lenovo computers are supported by our disk, including any of the following series:

  • Laptops models: ThinkPad and IdeaPad
  • Desktops models: Thinkcentre and Ideacentre

Essentials series for laptops and desktop PCs are also supported.

Do you have a Lenovo computer running Windows 7? Read our recovery and restore guide for Lenovo.

Toshiba

The disk is compatible with any Toshiba computer model: Satellite, Qosmio, Portege, Tecra, Kira family series and All-in-One desktop series.

Do you have a Toshiba computer running Windows 7? Read our recovery and restore guide for Toshiba.

Samsung

Samsung users can download our disk. It is compatible with any Samsung laptops or desktops:

  • ATIV Book, Gaming and Business PC series for laptops
  • ATIV One for All-in-One desktops

IBM, Compaq, Gateway, eMachines

IBM

Lenovo acquired IBM’s personal computer division in 2005. You can download Easy Recovery Essentials if you own a IBM computer.

It is compatible with IBM desktops and laptops models, like the ThinkPad series.

Compaq

The Compaq company was acquired by HP in 2002.

It is compatible with Compaq notebooks and desktops, including the Compaq Presario series.

Gateway and eMachines

Gateway Computers was acquired by Acer in 2007. If you happen to have a Gateway computer, you can download our disk. It is compatible with its manufactured series:

  • Series SX, DX and One ZX for desktop systems
  • NE and NV series for notebooks
  • LT series for netbooks

Do you have a Gateway computer running Windows 7? Read our recovery and restore guide for Gateway.

eMachines computers were available on sale until 2004 when Gateway Computers (above) brought the company. Gateway was acquired in 2007, but the eMachines brand was used until 2012.

If you own a computer from eMachines, you can download our disk as it is compatible with eMachines PCs.

Disk for Windows 8, Vista, XP or Server editions

Easy Recovery Essentials is compatible with other Windows versions, not just 7.

Windows 8

Read more about our recovery disk for Windows 8. It supports Windows 8 and its update, Windows 8.1.

Download for Windows 8.

Windows Vista

Read more about our recovery disk for Windows Vista. Easy Recovery Essentials supports all Windows Vista editions, from Vista Starter to Vista Ultimate, and the 32-bit and 64-bit versions.

Download for Windows Vista.

Windows XP and Server 2003, 2008 and 2012

Windows XP is supported by Easy Recovery Essentials. This includes Service Packs of XP too: SP1, SP2, SP3.

Easy Recovery Essentials supports all Windows Server editions, such as Server 2003, Server 2008 and Server 2012 and the updated versions: Server 2003 R2, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012 R2.

Support

Easy Recovery Essentials supports all Service Packs (SP) of your Windows:

  • Windows XP SP1, XP SP2, XP SP3
  • Windows Vista SP1, Vista SP2
  • Windows 7 SP1, 7 SP2
  • Windows 8, 8.1
  • Windows Server 2003 R2, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012 R2

Download Easy Recovery Essentials from here.

Please don’t ask for help below, it’ll get real cluttered real soon!

Open a support thread at https://neosmart.net/forums/ and we’ll help you resolve your problem ASAP.

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  • 590 thoughts on “Windows 7 Recovery Disk and Repair Disc Download

    1. Have these been modified in any way? People are scared as hell of torrent files. So many are dangerous or modified from the orignal.

    2. Whuut!?
      If they would post those Windows 7 Recovery Disc, why not give us links to a server where we can download, instead of this torrent crap,…?

      X64 version: 10 seeders, download speed: 0,0kb/s – and same speed after 3 hours

    3. @NickereN2O

      Check your network connection settings. I connected to 19 seeders and got a max speed of 2138 kB/s using uTorrent.

    4. NickereN2O, there two 100mbps servers seeding the torrents right now, so it is *definitely* a problem on your end, not ours. Check your network settings and/or contact your network administrator if you’re still having problems.

      The reason we have them as torrent files is due to the rather nasty practice of hotlinking. The first time we put up the Windows Vista recovery discs for download, certain Chinese sites drove us to 2TiB of data overnight, racking up huge and unsustainable costs.

      With bittorrent, we have our 100mbps servers providing the data, but as soon as soon it gets too expensive, we can safely take those offline while guaranteeing that the files will still be there for anyone that needs to download them.

      So, guys, please keep seeding!

    5. Unfortunately, the corporate network powers-that-be don’t allow torrent access. This translates into downloading at home. Pain.

    6. Obviously the torrent thing is due to the bandwidth involved to provide the download directly to everyone. It would chew up the monthly bandwidth allowed by the host in a hurry. I would agree with the torrent thing though, too many people mess with these torrents and you never know what you will end up with.

    7. Spot on, Dolphin.

      When we first released the Windows Vista Recovery Disc a year or so ago, we were hosting it ourselves. Overnight, a number of Chinese news websites hot-linked directly to the ISO image, running up several terabytes of traffic in a matter of mere hours. We were forced to switch to torrents because we totally overran our bandwidth budget due to that nasty behavior.

      The Windows Vista 32-bit and 64-bit ISO images have together been downloaded to the toll of 100 TiB in the past year, excluding the direct downloads mentioned earlier. You can imagine the cost that would incur on our non-profit organization.

    8. Why not post it up on rapidshare.com? All it takes is a simple upload (and maybe some patience). If the chinese sites hotlink it, then it won’t get deleted from rapidshare (before a very long time). haha. 🙂 Of course, there are other sites, but rapidshare has nearly no ads.

      I don’t use torrents: they’re mainly used to get things illegally. (And are rather inefficient for us users)

    9. This will come in very usefull thx, i downloaded this torrent in 30 seconds.
      If only you guys here at neosmart.net hosted cr@cked warez etc lol!… (;

    10. I don’t get you people… neosmart is a reliable site so what’s with all the complaining about using torrents? And the download is really fast, only took me 4 min at home. Thanks for this!!!

    11. @Nobody: If I understand the article correctly, I think you are right. Anybody can create this exact same thing by running recdisc.exe from the command-line. Pop a DVD into your burner and away you go.

    12. Ah, this disk is wonderful. Not sure why people are complaining about the torrent. Not only is it much faster, safer and more reliable, but it shows there are some excellent legitimate and legal uses for such a protocol.

    13. I downloaded it and compared the file sizes to the one I made from backup and they are not the same.

      for example:

      My Boot.wim is 168,035,558
      Theirs is 168,390,841

      So their is almost 400,000 bites larger.

      I would be interested to know what size Boot.wim comes out to be for other people who create the recovery disk on their system. It’s in the sources folder.

    14. Hi, I am curious to know what is the procedure and tools you used to achieve this system recovery tool?

      Is it only a Windows PE environment with a command prompt?

    15. We did not burn from recdisc.exe then rip to an ISO; instead we used something known as a virtual CD burner.

      64-bit: 168,390,841 created from Windows 7 Build 6.1.7600.16385 with RecDisc.exe with an MD5 of CDE81C3D7B325B33D8E0EA1AD7E93655

      32-bit: 144,838,785 created from Windows 7 Build 6.1.7600.16385 with RecDisc.exe with an MD5 of D8C17663091088F594258FF40F23E4B6

    16. Hello.

      In Windows 7 Ultimate Edition, you can go into the Control Panel “Backup and Restore” applet/window. On the left hand side, there is a “Create a system repair disc” option.

      Is this Windows 7 System Recovery Disc the exact same thing? Any difference?

      Thanks in advance for the feedback.

    17. Hi,
      Are these recovery discs still downloadable? I don’t seem to be getting any response when trying to download one. I’ve been trying for over 24 hours now and not a glimmer.

    18. @Jeff: It’s the same thing, except that feature is not, to the best of my knowledge, enabled in all editions/SKUs of Windows 7, and more importantly, you can download and burn this recovery CD from a non-Windows-7 environment (be it another PC, a Linux Live CD, etc.) after you’ve fried your PC. 🙂

    19. rapidshare.com/files/295118939/Windows_7_32-bit_Repair_Disc.rar

      rapidshare.com/files/295160998/Windows_7_64-bit_Repair_Disc.rar

    20. A lot of folks here don’t know what the heck they are talking about re: Torrents. Torrents are not dangerous, inefficient, or morally hazardous. They are reliable, fast, efficient, and cheap for hosts to provide. You can cancel and restart your download as needed. You automatically get a hash-checked download so you can be sure it is uncorrupted.

      Windows users should use uTorrent, Mac users Transmission. Both free and well-designed tools.

      Learn it folks!

    21. RS,
      Thanks for the Rapidshare link, downloaded in 14 mins, burned and verified in ImgBurn.
      All ready for the disaster when it happens, although I’ll give it a run through to make sure that it does boot up and go through the motions the next time I restart my PC. There’s nothing worse than sitting there with a false sense of security thinking you’re safe and then finding out, when it’s too late, that you’re not8-(

      Thanks again.

    22. You folks do realize the Windows 7 installation disc(s) does the same thing, right? It has the same tools on it, so the only *real* benefit to having or using these is to keep the original media (probably purchased unless you’ve got an MSDN/TechNet sub which would mean you can just re-download the ISO(s) and burn anytime).

      These discs – and I’m grateful to see them being posted for new users of Windows 7 as I’ve been running it for nearly 2 years now as a tester – are not absolutely necessary but are a welcome addition so that yes, you can keep the original installation media in a safe place and use these if necessary.

      Honestly, with over 25,000 Windows 7 installations so far, I’ve never had a need to use Recovery mode at all, not one time, on thousands of different machines and configurations.

      Windows 7 is really all that, and a bag of chips too. 🙂

      Have fun, always…

    23. Does anyone have the MD5sum for both the 32 & 64 bit iso that we are downloading here from the torrent.
      I would appreciate if anyone could post it or tell me where to get it . Thank you

    24. Booted up with the disc from the rapidshare link and everything went as hoped, I didn’t actually do a repair because the system is still OK. I was just making sure that it is alright before it is desparately needed.

      Thanks for the disc and all your help, which is much appreciated.

    25. Hey all, I was wondering if the repair disc would be able to enable me to upgrade from XP to Windows 7.

      Thanks in advance.

    26. You just have to make the upgrade iso bootable. There are two ways that have been well documented in windows7forums.com

      Also you can use easy transfer to backup your files and programs to usb or disk and restore them after 7 is installed.

    27. The W7 Installation DVD will do everything this download does.
      You don’t need to download this if you’ve already purchased a DVD.
      It’s provided (like the Vista versions before it) for those people who’ve bought an OEM PC pre-loaded with W7 where the OEM didn’t provide a portable recovery facility.
      You can use this to repair a broken boot, to regain access to the hidden recovery partition.

    28. Hello,
      The reason I aquiring your excellent software is becuase I had an issue during my windows 7 install. It seems something critical happened during the install which is causing my desktop pc to loop between startup. It boots up to windows saying “starting up services” and then it restarts itself. Now I downloaded your vista recovery disk(awesome by the way) and tryed to use it. It unfortunatly gives me errors when trying to install vista, and the repair feature did not work. So now I am going to try out this windows 7 recovery. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

    29. I’ve the same question as JEff:

      Hello.

      In Windows 7 Ultimate Edition, you can go into the Control Panel “Backup and Restore” applet/window. On the left hand side, there is a “Create a system repair disc” option.

      Is this Windows 7 System Recovery Disc the exact same thing? Any difference?

      Thanks in advance for the feedback.

    30. That is what they are providing. However I downloaded it and it’s a different size than the one that my computer made. No one can explain why. Perhaps there are various drivers added from the system it’s built on. In that case I wonder how compatible a generic startup disk would be with other systems?

    31. They are the exact same thing…
      No need to download this….

      ===========================================================>>>>>>>>>>

      I’ve the same question as JEff:

      Hello.

      In Windows 7 Ultimate Edition, you can go into the Control Panel “Backup and Restore” applet/window. On the left hand side, there is a “Create a system repair disc” option.

      Is this Windows 7 System Recovery Disc the exact same thing? Any difference?

      Thanks in advance for the feedback. “

    32. I just wanted to take the couple of seconds effort needed to say: ‘Thank you very much for organising these files’

      I really appreciate it and I am sure many, many others do too.

    33. I have a Windows XP laptop and will upgrade it with an upgrade disk to Windows 7 soon.

      Now I wonder, in case the worst case scenario takes place and my computer crashes one day: If I have to install Win on a new hard disk, would I need to reinstall XP first and then upgrade to Windows 7 or could I take the shortcut over the above mentioned repair/recovery disk? (or is the Windows 7 upgrade disk alone sufficient?)

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