Windows BACKUP AND RECOVERY Apps
EaseUS Data Recovery v2024
AOMEI FoneTool v3.6.0
Backup4all v2025
Macrium Reflect v10.0.8843.0
AOMEI Backupper v2023
Hard Disk Sentinel v2022
Wondershare Dr.Fone v9.2.0.11
Acronis Snap Deploy v2023
Acronis True Image v2026 (Build 42980)
Recuva v1.54.120
Personal Backup v2025
GoodSync v12.9.29
R-Undelete v2025
Ashampoo Backup v2025
AnyRecover v2025
PolarBackup v2025
Auslogics File Recovery v2025
NovaBACKUP v21.3.410
Auslogics BitReplica v2.6.0.2
O&O AutoBackup v2023
Restorer Ultimate v10.0 Build 820721
AOMEI Cyber Backup v4.5.0
EaseUS Disk Copy v7.0.0
R-Studio v9.5.191742
About BACKUP AND RECOVERY
This group holds two related but distinct kinds of tool, and it helps to separate them. Backup software copies your data on a schedule so a failure costs you nothing. Recovery software is what you reach for after a failure — when a drive has died, a partition is gone, or files were deleted before any backup existed.
On the backup side, the choice is usually between file backup and disk imaging. File backup copies documents and folders you select. Imaging captures the whole drive, operating system included, so you can restore a machine to exactly its previous state. Many suites do both, and the right mode depends on whether you are protecting documents or a full system setup.
Recovery tools work differently. Programs of this type scan a drive for data the file system no longer references and try to reassemble it. Their success depends heavily on one thing: how much the drive has been written to since the loss. The sooner you stop using a disk after deleting something important, the better the odds of getting it back.
A practical habit beats any single program. Keep more than one copy, on more than one device, with at least one copy away from the original — a routine often summarized as three-two-one. Software automates it, but the discipline of checking that a backup actually restores is what saves you when the day comes.






















