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If you are installing Windows 10 on a PC running Windows XP or Windows Vista, or if you need to create installation media to install Windows 10 on a different PC, see Using the tool to create installation media (USB flash drive, DVD, or ISO file) to install Windows 10 on a different PC section below.
If you downloaded an ISO file for Windows 10, the file is saved locally at the location you selected. If you have a third-party DVD burning program installed on your computer that you prefer to use for creating the installation DVD, that program might open by going to the location where the file is saved and double-clicking the ISO file, or right-click the ISO file, select Open with and choose your preferred DVD burning software.
If you want to use the Windows Disk Image Burner to create an installation DVD, go to the location where the ISO file is saved. Right-click the ISO file and select Properties. On the General tab, click Change and select Windows Explorer for the program you would like to use to open ISO files and select Apply. Then right-click the ISO file and select Burn disc image.
To create installation media, go to the software download website, where you'll find step-by-step instructions. On that website, you can select a version of Windows and create your own installation media using either a USB flash drive or a DVD. To go directly to one of the versions, select one of these links:
A USB flash drive, external hard drive, or DVD. A blank USB flash drive or external hard drive with at least 8 GB of space, or a blank DVD (and DVD burner). We recommend using a blank USB or blank DVD because any content on it will be deleted. When burning a DVD from an ISO file, if you're told the disc image file is too large, you'll need to use dual layer (DL) DVD media.
System recovery options can help you repair Windows if a serious error occurs. To use system recovery options, you'll need a Windows installation disc or access to the recovery options provided by your computer manufacturer. If you don't have either of those choices, you can create a system repair disc to access system recovery options.
Recover Windows 7 from a serious error. If your computer won't start Windows at all, you can access Startup Repair and other tools in the System Recovery Options menu from the Windows 7 installation disc or USB flash drive. These tools can help you get Windows 7 running again.
The System Recovery Options menu contains several tools, such as Startup Repair, that can help you recover Windows from a serious error. This set of tools is on your computer's hard disk and on the Windows installation disc.
If your computer's system is severely damaged and you can't access the System Recovery Options menu on your computer, you can access it using the Windows 7 installation disc or a USB flash drive, or using a system repair disc if you created one earlier.
Microsoft has not allowed OEMs (Dell, Lenovo, etc.) to ship discs for quite some years now - you were supposed to prepare a boot/rescue set when you received the system. If you did not, see the link below.
But the recovery disc doesn't have fdisk or format, so I would need to find something else to boot from and prepare the disk. That was one of the major things we used to do with the Windows Install CD/DVD. That and the clean install combined are sometimes the only way to recover a system, or to determine if the hard drive is failing, since SATA drives hide the bad spot information from the OS. The recovery disk is still far from a complete solution, and I'm stuck with a laptop which only half works until I can get viable media from which I can perform all the steps required to actually wipe and restore my system. My system is exhibiting symptoms like application boxes on the tiles interface with no text, and when you click them nothing starts. And even the File Explorer, when one is running and I right-click and try to start another, tells me it is a dead link. There are many similar problems, Startup items which fail because the application/program installation is broken at various and multiple levels (file system and registry locations). Running the Recovery from the USB restore drive I created does not fix it, even though the system was operational when I created it. I see many complaints about the difficulty of getting an actual Windows Install CD/DVD and don't understand why Dell is so stuborn about listening to all their customers complaints on the issue. I found a link online which was supposed to allow me to order media from Dell, but it doesn't work, regardless of which browser I use. Dell has already replaced the motherboard and network card on this four month old laptop. I was pleased with that part of the service and the fact that the technician who came out to my house to repair the computer left me a Drivers disc. But since I am capable of wiping and reinstalling the operating system, I see no reason they should make it so tedious to get the tools to do so. What I'm hearing is a distinct Bah Humbug.
It IS true that clean installs are getting harder to do - but that's Microsoft's doing, not Dell - or Lenovo, Toshiba, etc. MS sets the terms under which OEMs can release Windows discs, and the OEMs have to comply with the terms of Microsoft's licensing.
This topic covers how to manually create a Windows installation USB drive from Windows installation ISO disc image file or DVD, and is intended for PC manufacturers looking into creating media that they can use to manufacture Windows devices.
The steps described on this page assume you have Windows installation media and access to a Windows technician PC. If you're looking for an easy, automated way to create a bootable USB Windows installation drive, see:
A 64-bit version of Windows 10 Home or Windows 10 Pro on a disk image (ISO) or other installation media. If installing Windows on your Mac for the first time, this must be a full version of Windows, not an upgrade.
Traditionally, users download the ISO files of Windows 10, burn them to DVD via third-party software, and then install Windows 10 from DVD. Now things get much easier, Microsoft offers a user-friendly Microsoft Media Creation Tool to help you get the installation media ready.
4. Select the removable drive from the list when asked, and make sure you've copied any files you want to keep off it because it will be formatted during the process of creating Windows installation media. Click Next to continue.
In addition to using Windows 10 installation disc, there is another way to install Windows 10 to another hard drive. By using a professional Windows 10 migration tool, you can easily migrate Windows 10 from one drive to another without having to reinstall.
MiniTool Partition Wizard makes it easy to migrate OS to SSD/HD. This means you are able to copy Windows 10 to the new drive without having to do the installation. Here is how to install Windows 10 on new PC:
You first need to make sure your computer is set to boot from your DVD drive or from USB. Insert your DVD or USB installation disk and restart your PC. You may find that your PC has a special boot override menu, which you can access with a key such as F10; look out for the message while your computer starts. If this is the case, press the key as soon as the message is displayed, then select your DVD drive or USB stick to boot.
Once in Setup, find the Boot section. Now change the boot order to put the device you want to boot from first; this will be DVD or USB, depending on your installation media type. Bootable USB flash drives are sometimes listed as hard disks. If this is the case you'll need to set 'hard disk' as the first boot option, then go into the hard disk boot order sub-menu and put your USB boot disk at the top of the list. Find and select the Save and Restart option or equivalent. Your PC should now boot into the Windows 10 setup program - you may see a message to 'press any key to boot from USB', so do so.
If you physically purchased a copy of Windows 10, either from a store or via an online shop as a download, you will have a full and proper Windows 10 code. You should enter this at this point and you will not be asked for it again. This is the simplest way of handling the installation.
Provided you created new boot media using the latest version of Windows 10 (i.e. you weren't using an older installation disc or USB key), you can now just enter in your valid Windows 7 or Windows 8 key, and your licence will automatically be updated to a Windows 10 one with no additional hassle.
What you'll see in the next screen depends on whether you're installing on a blank disk, or whether your disk has had an operating system installed on it previously. If it's a blank disk, you'll be shown a drive with 'Unallocated Space', so just select it and click Next. Windows will then start the installation process.
If your disk has had an operating system on it previously, or if you have more than one hard disk in your PC, you'll be shown a screen with several disks and partitions. The disks will be called 'Drive 0', 'Drive 1' and so on, and if a disk has previously had a Windows installation it will be split into partitions with labels such as 'Recovery', 'System', 'MSR' and 'Primary'.
Bear in mind that this may also delete your manufacturer's recovery partitions, so you won't be able to go back to your previous operating system. Once you've finished deleting partitions, make sure the drive you want to use for your Windows 10 installation is selected and press Next to install.
Want to reinstall Windows 8.1 but don't have any installation media for it Microsoft has released this new tool for you. It could come in handy if you ever want to reinstall Windows 8.1 or install it from scratch. The free tool downloads and creates the installation media you need to install Window 8.1 right away, without having to first install Windows 8 and then update to Windows 8.1, a lengthy process. Save the ISO image to