If you have tried upgrading your Windows PC and it has failed a
couple of times due to various annoying reasons, you’ve probably come to
realize that there is a large chunk of disk space being eaten up by a
folder called Windows.old.
Windows.old is automatically generated whenever you perform an
installation of Windows with a previous version of the OS already
installed. It creates this
Windows.old folder in the root of the Windows
partition and stores the previous operating system files and data.
In case you try to upgrade from Windows Vista to Windows 7 or Windows 7
to Windows 10 and it fails, you can always revert back to Windows Vista
or 7 safely. The only issue with this is that every time the install
fails, another copy of the previous OS is copied into Windows.old.
So, if your upgrade install failed 2 or 3 times, that Windows.old folder
can become very large, very fast! On top of that, the folder is not
automatically deleted once you are up and running with the newer version
of Windows, so you have to get rid of it yourself.
Remove Windows.old Folder
So how do you get rid of the folder? Well, you have to use the Disk
Cleanup utility! Here’s how to go about it. The first method will
describe how to delete the Windows.old folder on Windows 7/8/10. If you
are in Windows Vista still, follow the second set of instructions.
Windows 7/8/10 Instructions
If you are in Windows 7/8/10 and want to delete the Windows.old
folder, the process is fairly straightforward.
First, open Disk Cleanup
via the Start Menu (click Start and type in disk cleanup) and when the
dialog pops up, choose the drive that has the .old files on it and click
OK. This is normally just the C drive. If that’s the only drive on your
computer, it won’t even ask you to choose.
The system will perform a scan and another dialog will pop up with the selection. Now click on the button
Cleanup system files button at the bottom.
Now choose the drive again that has the .old files on it. The system
will perform a second scan of files that need to be cleaned up and will
take a bit longer.
Finally, a dialog will pop up with another set of checkboxes. Scroll down until you find one labeled
Older versions of Windows or
Previous Windows installations and click
OK.
As you can see, it’s normally quite a large amount of data that gets taken up by previous installations of Windows.
That’s it! That should get rid of those space-hogging .old folders
forever! If you have any problems getting rid of them, post a comment
here and I’ll try to help. Enjoy!
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