Windows 10 Moving Recovery Partition If you've tried to expand a disk, but the Recovery Volume is in the way, here's how to move it. Cached from here: https://thedxt.ca/2023/06/moving-windows-recovery-partition-correctly/ Moving Windows Recovery Partition Correctly   June 10, 2023 Recently I needed to expand a disk on a Windows 10 VM and a Windows Server 2022 VM, but I couldn’t because the Recovery Partition was in the way. When searching for a way to do this I discovered that the internet is full of posts about simply deleting the Windows Recovery Partition. I am not a fan of simply deleting a recovery tool. On numerous occasions the recovery partition has been instrumental in helping me to fix a system. If you search for how to move the Windows Recovery Partition the internet has many posts of fake ways to do it or ways to do it with third-party tools like GParted. I have nothing against third-party tools or GParted and I don’t doubt some of those methods do work. The issue I have with those methods is that you have to take the system offline in order to do them or the tools cost money. Now yes you could just delete the Windows Recovery partition, but before you do that make sure you understand that you will lose a bunch of recovery options. You can read more about the recovery options you’ll lose in an earlier post I made about the  Windows Recovery Partition . Here’s how to correctly move the Windows Recovery Partition on a Windows server or a normal Windows system. This is what my partitions look like in Disk Management. We will move the 1 GB recovery partition to the end of the disk allowing us to add the 50 GB of unallocated space to the C drive. The Process Make sure you have a backup of the system you are going to edit the partitions on. Open Command Prompt as admin Run CMD as admin Disabling The Windows Recovery Partition We need to disable the existing Windows Recovery Partition to do that run the command  reagentc /disable Disabling the Recovery Partition The  reagentc /disable  command will disable the recovery partition and will move the recovery partition into a file named  Winre.wim  and will be located in  C:\Windows\System32\Recovery  (you have to enable showing hidden system files if you want to see it) The Windows Recovery Partition File DiskPart Run the command  diskpart  to launch DiskPart Launching DiskPart List the disks in your system. You can do this by using the command  list disk Listing the disks in DiskPart and showing the disk is a GPT disk Pro tip from Matt in the comments, if there’s a * in the column for Gpt that means the disk is likely a GPT disk and if there isn’t a * in the Gpt column the disk is likely MBR. Make a note of this as it will be important further down. Select the disk you need to move the recovery partition on. You can do this by using the command  select disk  and the disk number. In my setup disk 0 was the correct disk and the command I entered was  select disk 0 . Selecting the disk in DiskPart List the partitions on that disk. You can do this by using the command  list partition Listing the partitions in DiskPart Select the recovery partition. You can do this by using the command  select partition  and the partition number. In my setup partition 4 is my recovery partition and the command I entered was  select partition 4 Selecting the partition in DiskPart The recovery partition is a protected partition so we need to use a bit more force to delete it. Force the deletion of the recovery partition. You can do this by using the command  delete partition override Forcing the partition deletion Disk Management Now if you look in Disk Management you should no longer have the Recovery Partition and it should show up as unallocated. Disk Management with the Recovery Partition deleted Expand your disk and leave about 1024 MB off your resized size to leave room for the re-enabling the Recovery Partition. Expanding the partition but leaving room for the Windows Recovery Partition Disk Management should now look something like this. Disk Management after expanding the disk and leaving room for the Windows Recovery Partition Once the disk is expanded we need to rebuild everything that is needed for Windows to know that the extra space that we left unallocated can be used to for the recovery partition. Create a New Simple Volume with the unallocated space. Creating a New Simple Volume Don’t give it a drive letter. Not giving the New Simple Volume a drive letter or a drive path You can give the new partition a name if you want it does not mater. I’m going to call mine New Recovery. Naming the New Simple Volume Disk Management should now look something like this. Disk Management with the newly created partition that will become the Windows Recovery Partition Back to DiskPart In DiskPart list your partitions again by running the command  list partition Listing the partitions with DiskPart Select the 1024 MB partition with the command  select partition  and the partition number. In my setup it was partition 4 and the command I ran was  select partition 4 Selecting the partition with DiskPart If you have a GPT disk you need to run some very specific command and if you have an MBR disk you need to run different very specific commands. GPT disk On GPT disks we need to change the partition ID to  de94bba4-06d1-4d40-a16a-bfd50179d6ac  which tells Windows that this is a recovery partition Run the following command to set the partition as a recovery partition  set id=de94bba4-06d1-4d40-a16a-bfd50179d6ac Setting the GPT partition ID in DiskPart We also need to hide the drive and flag it as a required partition to do that we have to set a GPT attribute to  0x8000000000000001 Run the following command to set the GPT attribute to hide the drive and flag it as required  gpt attributes=0x8000000000000001 Setting the GPT attribute in DiskPart Now we can exist DiskPart. Exiting DiskPart MBR disk On MBR disks we need to change partition ID to  27  which will tell Windows that this is a recovery partition. Run the following command to set the partition as a recovery partition  set id=27 setting the MBR partition ID in DiskPart Now we can exist DiskPart. Exiting DiskPart Enabling The Windows Recovery Partition Now we can re-enable the recovery partition by running the command  reagentc /enable Enabling the Windows Recovery Partition The  reagentc /enable  command will copy the  Winre.wim  file from  C:\Windows\System32\Recovery  into our new recovery partition. Windows Recovery Partition file is now back on the recovery partition If you look at Disk Management again everything shows up correctly. That’s all there is to it. Technically speaking we did just delete the Windows Recovery Partition but we did so in a way to keep our existing recovery partition safely intact and then we rebuild the recovery partition and re-enabled it. I prefer doing it this way as it leaves your recovery options intact and you can do it all live without any reboots. If you want to read more about deploying the Windows Recovery Partition you can do so by reading  Microsoft’s documentation about it . If you want to read more about reagentc command you do so by reading  Microsoft’s documentation about it .