Commercial backup programs used to be the best way to go because they were the only way to get features like advanced scheduling, disk and partition cloning, incremental backup, and more. Not so anymore! Some of the best free software tools do everything expensive programs do…and more. While scheduling a backup, or once one has completed, you can run an incremental, differential, or full backup on the same data. Backups are not readable from File Explorer, so you must use EaseUS Todo Backup to view the data. More specifically, you can double-click the backup file to open it in the program, where it looks like File Explorer and is just as easy to use, but you have to have the program installed in order to open the backup. A timeline of backups is shown so that it’s easy to choose a particular time from which to restore files. You can restore whole folders and/or individual files to their original location or a custom one. It also allows changing the file compression of a backup, limiting the backup speed and priority, preserving security settings during a backup, splitting an archive into a smaller section, password protecting a backup, and scheduling a backup on a one-time, daily, weekly, or monthly basis. The program is compatible with Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, and Windows Vista. All backed up data, no matter the type, is held in one single file, which can be saved to a local or external drive as well as a shared network folder. You can also back up your files and folders to AOMEI Cloud, the company’s online file storage service. AOMEI Backupper supports encrypting a backup with a password, setting a custom compression level, receiving email notifications once backups have completed, splitting a backup into pieces of a custom size (like for CDs and DVDs), and choosing between an exact backup (copies used and unused space) or an intelligent sector backup (just backs up used space). Scheduling is supported, so you can choose to run a backup on one occasion only or every day, week, or month, as well as at a continual interval throughout the day. Advanced settings are available to choose a full, incremental, or differential backup. We particularly like the restore function. You’re able to mount a backed-up image as a local drive and search through the data as if it were truly in File/Windows Explorer. You can even copy out individual files and folders. Instead of exploring a backup, you can also restore all the data with just a few clicks. Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP users can install AOMEI Backupper Standard. A full, differential, or incremental backup can be used. It also supports automatically removing empty folders from a backup and utilizing Volume Shadow Copy. You can set up the program to encrypt and/or compress a backup into individual archives for each file, do a simple copy without archiving anything, or archive the entire source location into one file. If compressing a backup, you also have the option to configure splitting it into smaller sections, which is useful if using the files on something like a CD. Scheduling a backup can be very precise. Cobian Reflector can run a backup job once, on startup, daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, or on a timer that runs every so many minutes. Several options are available for launching tasks before and/or after a backup job runs, some of which include starting a program, stopping a service, hibernating the computer, and running a custom command. This program also supports choosing a backup priority, running a job as a different user, sending failed/success logs to one or more email addresses, and defining advanced filtering options to include/exclude data from a backup. Unfortunately, There are no restore options short of just browsing the backup folder and pulling out the files. It works with Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, and Windows Vista. Windows Server editions are supported too. A wizard walks you through the backup process to help you specify what files should be backed up and where they should go. You can back up multiple folders and/or individual files to an external drive, CD/DVD/Blu-ray, network folders, or another folder on the same drive as the source files. When choosing data to include in a backup, you’re able to filter the files to only include ones that are under a certain size and/or a particular file type. You can encrypt a backup, schedule backups daily or weekly, and optionally run missed ones at startup. Restoring a backup gives you the option to restore to the original location or a new one. macOS (10.5 through 10.14) and Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP users can install FileFort Backup. Simple selection lets you choose common files and locations to back up, such as internet browser bookmarks, music, and videos. Data can be included or excluded from a backup by folder or file name, as well as by using advanced filtering options with the use of wildcards. Backups made with BackUp Maker can be restricted to run on certain days of the week or month, can launch when you log on or off, can be scheduled to run every so-many minutes, and can even be automatically launched only if a certain USB device is plugged in. Conditional settings can be set like only running a backup if a particular file or folder is found anywhere on a local, external, or network location. You’re also given the choice to run a backup only if files have changed since a certain date, within the last so-many days, or since the last full backup. When restoring a backup, you can choose any location on your computer and optionally select to only back up new files. BackUp Maker also supports encryption, splitting of the backed up files, pre/post tasks, running missed tasks, custom compression, and assigning shortcut keys to run backups without opening the program interface. One thing we don’t like is that password protection isn’t an included feature. This backup software is supported on Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP, as well as Windows Server 2019-2003. A DAT file is made that contains the actual data that’s on the drive while a small XML file is built to keep descriptive information regarding the backup. Before a backup is performed, you can choose to also back up unused space, to compress the files, and/or to split the backup into smaller sections. If splitting a backup into pieces, you are unable to specify the size of the slices, which is unfortunate. You can restore a backup image onto a hard drive (that’s the same size or larger as the original) or browse through the backup using DriveImage XML. You’re able to extract out individual files, search through the backup, and even directly launch some files without restoring everything. Scheduling a backup is supported, but it’s done only with command line parameters, which is useful if using Task Scheduler to automate a backup. DriveImage XML can also back up, or clone, one drive to another without creating an image file. This method, as well as a regular backup and restore as described above, can also be launched before Windows boots, using the Runtime Live CD. The program will start a backup during the wizard when you seemingly least expect it, so ensure you’re ready to start the backup when clicking Next on the screen entitled Backup. It’s said to work with Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP, as well as Windows Server 2016, 2012, and 2008. Data can be backed up to a local or external drive, CD/DVD, network folder, FTP server, or sent to someone as an email. Various backup file types are supported like creating a CBU, ZIP, or ISO file as well as running a two-way or one-way sync, using a regular copy function, or creating a self-extracting CBU file. Depending on the backup file type you use with COMODO Backup, you can specify if it should be spliced into smaller pieces, compressed, and/or password protected. The scheduling options are very specific, enabling a backup to run manually, at login, once, daily, weekly, monthly, when idle, or every so-many minutes. Missed jobs can even be configured to run in silent mode to suppress all notifications and program windows. Restoring files with COMODO Backup is really easy because you can mount the image file as a disk and browse through the backed up files as you would in Explorer, copying out anything you wish. Alternatively, you can just restore the whole backup image to the original location. This free backup program also supports email notifications, file exclusions by extension type, using Volume Shadow Copy for copying locked files, disk/partition mirroring, changing CPU and network priority, and running a custom program before and/or after a backup job. It should run without any problems in Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP. You can use Redo Rescue to back up a drive to an internal hard drive, external USB device, a shared network folder, or over FTP, SSH, or NFS. A collection of files backed up with this program can’t be read as regular files. To restore the data, you must use the program again and then select the drive you wish to restore the files to. The destination drive will be completely overwritten with the backed up data. Redo Rescue is best used in a situation where you wish to be able to restore an entire hard drive. While this type of backup does include all the files and programs on the drive, it’s not meant for individual file and folder restoration. Any number of file versioning is supported, and you have the option to keep the original folder structure intact for better organization. You can also exclude subdirectories and define included/excluded files by their extension. The only scheduling option is to run backup jobs automatically or manually. There are no custom options, like on a per hour or day basis. Yadis! Backup can be set up to monitor when a file is created, removed, and/or changed. If any or all of these events take place, a backup job will run. Even the settings you’ve modified in Yadis! Backup can be configured to back up to a specified folder when changes are made so that you don’t lose your custom options. You can only choose one folder to back up at a time. Any additional folders need to be created as their own backup job. Something we don’t like is that there are no options for easily restoring backed up files. To access files that have been backed up is to simply browse through the backup folder, whether it be on an FTP server or a different drive. This program can be installed on Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP. It supports an option for excluding subfolders entirely, and can also exclude files from a backup by name and/or file type. Scheduling can be set for more than one job at a time and supports hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, or manual backups. There are no password options or encryption settings. While that’s unfortunate, it also means you can use the backed up data as real files; you can open, edit, and view them normally. The minimum requirement is that you’re using one of these operating systems: Windows 8, 7, Vista, or XP. It should also work in newer versions, like Windows 11 and 10. You can back up disks, partitions, and files and folders to any local, external, or networked drive. Backups can run on a set schedule daily, weekly, or monthly, but only incremental backup is supported (not full or differential). It’s also your choice if you want to back up every sector or only the used ones. With this program, you can set a custom file size for the backup so that it fits on CDs, etc. Custom compression, email alerts, hibernation file exclusion, password protection, and backup verification are supported, too. You’d think the features would end by now, but MiniTool ShadowMaker also has a tool you can utilize to restore a backup even if your computer won’t start. You can also use MiniTool’s free backup software to clone disks, manually mount a backup for easy browsing, and set up a file/folder sync job. Some features are excluded in the free version and only available if you pay. However, what you get with the free edition is still much better than what some free backup tools supply. This software was built to run on all edition of Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, and Windows 7. The program interface looks really nice, is clean, and isn’t at all hard to use. The menus are displayed side by side in separate tabs, so it’s simple to move through the settings. Files can be added to a backup job one at a time or in bulk through a folder, and a backup job can be saved locally or on a network, using one of three backup types. You can also choose the number of backups to store. Aside from ZIP compression, email notifications, and password protection, Iperius Backup has some other custom options as well. You can include hidden files and system files in the backup, shut down the computer after completing the backup, favor compression speed over high compression, and run backups on a schedule. In addition to the above, Iperius Backup can launch a program, another backup job, or file before and/or after a backup job. When building a backup job, you can also exclude files, particular folders, all subfolders, and particular extensions from the backup. You can even include or exclude files that are less than, equal to, or greater than a specific file size to ensure you’re backing up exactly what you want. This program is said to be compatible with Windows 11, 10, 8, 7, and XP, as well as Windows Server 2022 through 2008. The program lets you store copies of your files on a friend’s computer, no matter where it’s at. It’s a bit like an online backup service, but instead of paying for storage space on a server somewhere, you and a friend can exchange free space on your own hard drives to store the other person’s backups. This also works on your own network, so if you want to keep your videos backed up to the computer downstairs, you can do that, too. All files are encrypted and compressed before transport, so someone on the other computer can’t see what you’re backing up. File and folder filtering are supported. Restoring is as easy as choosing which files you want to download back to your computer, and you can, at any time, delete the remote backup from your own computer. If you’re connecting with a friend outside your network, they’ll have to set up port forwarding, and you’ll need to know their public IP address. Upload/download throttling is supported. This app runs on any Java platform, so it works on Windows, Linux, and other operating systems. The great thing about this tool is that you can back up the primary hard drive you’re using as you use it. This means you don’t need to boot to a disc or avoid backing up your primary hard drive. Also, only the used space is backed up, meaning a 40 GB drive with 2 GB of used space will only produce a 2 GB backup file. Just choose where to save the VHD or VHDX file and hit the Create button. If backing up the drive you’re currently using, ensure “Use Volume Shadow Copy” is enabled so Disk2vhd can copy files that are currently being used. It’s ideal to save the backup image to a drive other than the one you’re backing up to avoid performance degradation. There’s also support for creating a backup file using the command line. Disk2vhd works with Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, and Windows Vista, as well as Windows Server 2008 and newer. It’s really easy to add more than one file or folder to GFI Backup to be included in a backup job. The folder structure looks just like it does in Explorer, letting you place a check next to anything you want to be included. A backup can be encrypted with a password, compressed, split into small chunks, and even built into a self-extracting archive. You can choose to restore certain files or select entire folders at once to be copied back to the original backup location or saved elsewhere. GFI Backup also includes a sync feature, detailed scheduled tasks, and incremental and differential backups. It should be able to run on all versions of Windows, including Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, and Windows 7. You’ll walk through a wizard with any option you choose. The first will ask you to choose the drive you wish to back up and where to save the IMG file. The Restore Image option is just the opposite of the first, and the last selection lets you clone a drive to another without having to first create an image. The bad thing about Free Easis Drive Cloning is that it backs up everything, even the unused, free space of the drive. This means if you’re backing up a 200 GB hard drive that has only 10 GB of actual data, the IMG file will still be 200 GB in size. This software is said to work with Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP, and Windows 2000. We tested it in Windows 10 and Windows 8 without running into any problems. When adding content to back up, you must browse for each file and folder you want to be added. While you are able to select multiple files at once, you can’t quickly add numerous folders like some of the other backup programs from this list are able to do. You can encrypt a backup with Ocster Backup, set up a daily or weekly schedule, and exclude content by name, extension, or folder. Also, another plus is that the original directory structure is still present when you restore the files, which makes it rather simple to navigate through them. Ocster Backup is limited in that it doesn’t support backing up to a network drive, and restoring files is an all or nothing deal where you must restore everything at once. The official list of supported operating systems include Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP. Backups can be compressed using one of three modes: password-protected, encrypted, and set up to use a schedule. They can also be configured to launch a program before and/or after the backup completes. You can include/exclude files from the backup by their extension type, which is helpful if you’re adding a large sum of files that include ones you don’t necessarily need to back up. The log files made with AceBackup can optionally be emailed on the event of an error or chosen to be sent even on successful backups. Something we don’t like is that some of the options in this program aren’t described, which can leave you wondering what certain settings will do when they are enabled. We successfully used AceBackup in Windows 10, but it should work just as well in Windows 11, Windows 8, and Windows 7. An easy to use wizard guides you through the backup process and includes preset locations you can choose to back up, like the Documents and Pictures folder, Microsoft Outlook, and Google Chrome settings. In addition, FBackup lets you add your own files and folders to a backup job. You can exclude certain data from a job by specifying a word in the folder or file name, as well as the type of file extension. Two backup types are supported in the free edition: Full and Mirror. A full backup compresses every file into ZIP folders, while a mirror creates an exact replica of the files in non-compressed form. Both allow encryption. Backup jobs are created using a built-in interface that corresponds with the Task Scheduler service in Windows to run a backup at times like once, weekly, at logon, or when idle. Once a job completes, FBackup can be set to hibernate, sleep, shutdown, or log off Windows. A backup can be restored using a simple restore utility that comes built-in, which lets you restore everything or individual files to their original location or a new one. You also have the option to restore only the latest version of the files, or to run filters to restore specific file types. While testing FBackup, we found that it downloaded quickly but took a bit longer than usual to install. It’s officially compatible with Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, and Windows Vista. It can also be installed on Windows Server 2022, 2019, 2016, 2012, and 2008. Using the Setup for Windows download will let the program run inside Windows. You’re also able to back up one disk or partition to another, but it will overwrite the data on the destination drive. Use the Hybrid ISO if you’re not running Windows XP or newer. It also contains an ISO image for burning HDClone Free Edition to a disc, which can be used to back up the partition with the OS installed, since it runs before the OS actually launches. Some features, like choosing a compression level and encrypting a backup, appear to be supported but are unfortunately only available in the paid version. You also must have a paid edition to use this on a Windows Server OS. If the Windows program is used, it’s said to be compatible with Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP. If saved as an image, the program will produce an MRIMG file, which can only be opened and used with Macrium Reflect. This file can be saved to a local drive, network share, external drive, or burned directly to a disc. You can even add more than one backup location to build a fail-safe in the event that a destination becomes invalid. You can schedule a full backup on a schedule so every day, week, month, or year, a backup will be made of any drive, including the one with Windows installed. A backup job can also be scheduled to run at startup or log on. To restore a backed up image to a drive with Windows installed, you must use the Macrium Reflect program to build a Windows or Linux rescue disc, both of which can restore an MRIMG file. Once an image is made, you can even convert it to a VHD (Virtual Hard Disk) file to use in other applications. You can also mount the backup as a virtual drive that mimics a local one, allowing you to browse through the backed up files and folders and copy out anything you want. Macrium Reflect also supports splitting a backup into smaller pieces, custom compression, full disk backup (includes free space), and automatic shutdown/hibernation/sleep after a job finishes. Neither individual file/folder backup nor encryption is supported. The program should work on all versions of Windows. We tested it in Windows 10 and Windows 8. A backup image can be built into one file or separated into chunks for easier placement on media like CDs and DVDs. You have the option to back up a drive’s used data or the used and unused portions of the disk. The latter would require more space than the former, since copying free space along with the used space would mean everything would be backed up, creating a replica of the original drive/partition. Restoring a backup is really easy with ODIN because you just select the disk that should be restored and then load the backup file. It’s too bad there aren’t any encryption options in ODIN, but you are able to compress a backup using GZip or BZip2 compression. We tested ODIN in Windows 8 and Windows 7, but it should also work for other versions of Windows, like Windows 11 and Windows 10. A backup can’t be compressed or encrypted with this program. Scheduling isn’t built-in either, but you can make a few changes to how the program launches as well as use an external scheduling program to make it work. You can filter a backup job so that files with particular extensions get copied, leaving out all the rest. There’s also an option to only back up files that have been modified after a particular date and time, as well as a toggle to turn on incremental backups. Freebyte Backup is said to work only with Windows Vista, XP, and older versions of Windows, but we tested it in Windows 10 and 8 without any issues. Image backups can be stored on a local or external drive as well as a SAMBA, NFS, or SSH server. You can compress a backup image, split it into custom sizes, and even check a hard drive for errors using a free hard drive testing tool before creating an image. Restoring a backup with CloneZilla Live involves taking the regular backup process steps but doing so in reverse. It sounds confusing, but following the on-screen instructions makes it pretty easy. Data is backed up using a regular copy method without encryption or password options, which means you can browse through a backup like you would any other folder in Explorer. Options let you exclude subfolders from a backup, filter out certain files by their extension, avoid backing up particular directories, and schedule backup jobs. You can toggle Karen’s Replicator to only copy data if: the source file is newer than the backup, the sizes are different, and/or if the source has been changed since the time of the last backup. You can also decide whether or not Karen’s Replicator should delete files from a backup if they’re removed from the source folder. The interface of Karen’s Replicator is a bit outdated but it didn’t interfere with backups or our ability to find settings. We used Karen’s Replicator in Windows 10 and Windows XP, so it should work in other versions of Windows as well. When selecting the files to be backed up, Personal Backup only allows single files to be added at a time. You can keep adding more, but only one can actually be chosen at a time, which can slow down the process of creating a backup job. You can, however, select whole folders, and context menu integration is supported. A backup can be built as an archive for each and every file, creating many ZIP files, or as a single archive which contains all the data. Options are available for encryption, compression, and file types that should be excluded from compression. Personal Backup allows a total of 16 backup jobs to be created, each of which can have their own scheduling options and incremental or differential backup type. Email alerts can be sent with Personal Backup on the completion or error of a backup job, a program can be launched before and/or after a backup runs, and you can easily set a backup to shut down or hibernate the computer when it’s finished running. To use Personal Backup, you must download the proper 32-bit or 64-bit version that matches your version of Windows. We find Personal Backup to be very cluttered, making it hard to find what you’re looking for because nearly all the settings are simply thrown into the program interface with seemingly no organization. However, it does update a lot, which is a good sign that it’s constantly trying to improve. The 64-bit version runs on Windows 11, 10, 8, and 7, as well as Windows Server 2008 R2, 2012, 2016, and 2019. Windows Vista and XP users can install the 32-bit version. If you want to password protect the backup, you can save it as a Paragon Image (PVHD) file. Otherwise, the program also supports backing up data to a VMWare Image (VMDK) file or a Microsoft Virtual PC Image (VHD) file. Incremental backups are also supported. Settings are available to compress a backup and manage how much splitting, if any, should be done to cut the backup into smaller pieces. You can also choose which file types and/or directories to exclude from a whole disk backup. Restoring data is as easy as selecting the backup image and choosing the drive to restore it to. Overall, Paragon Backup & Recovery is a bit harder to use than some of the better programs on this list. Also, the setup file is over 150 MB, so it could take some time to finish downloading. Take note that you need to register for a free user account on their website before you can fully use the program. That, or log in via another account when you first open the program, like your Google account. Supported operating systems include macOS and Windows 11, Windows 10, Windows 8, and Windows 7. There is no restore function, and everything that’s on the destination disk is wiped clean before XXCLONE beings backing up the source drive’s files. You’re able to adjust the speed of the backup as well as make the destination drive bootable. We tested this program in Windows 10, 8 and 7, but it should also work for Windows 11, Vista, and XP. There isn’t a graphical interface when using PING, so you must be somewhat comfortable with a text-only navigation screen to use this program. You have the option to back up partitions to a local or external drive as well as to a network share or FTP server. When selecting the correct source and destination drive for a backup or restore, it’s actually a bit difficult to determine which drive is which. PING does not show you the name of the drive or the size, but instead just the first few files that are located on the disk. This is only slightly helpful when determining the right disk to select. You can compress a backup and optionally set it up for incremental backups in the future, both of which are options you’re asked before starting a backup. When restoring a backup with PING, you’re required to know the exact path of the backed up files. You’re unable to “browse” for the files like you can when an operating system is loaded, so you must know the exact path to the files to successfully restore them. You can encrypt, compress, and/or split a backup into small sections. Areca Backup can easily filter the types of files to be backed up by extension type, registry location, directory name, file size, locked file status, and/or file date. Before and after a backup job runs, you can set up a file to be launched and/or an email to be sent. Conditional settings are available like only running the file or sending the message if the backup succeeds or throws an error/warning message. You can restore one or more individual files and/or folders to a custom location, but you aren’t given the option to restore to the original backup location. We’ve ranked Areca Backup this low on the list because it isn’t as easy to use as most of the other programs you see here. Visit the Areca official website for tutorials and manuals. We were able to get this program to work with Windows 10, 7, and XP, but it may also work in other versions of Windows. It backs up entire hard drives to other hard drives, supporting both internal and external devices like flash drives. You can copy hard drives even if they’re different sizes by choosing to scale drives or do a raw copy so that everything is copied, both used and unused space. You must confirm a copy before starting, which is a good thing, but CopyWipe doesn’t provide any identifiable details to differentiate between the drives, which means you must use Disk Management to know which one is Hard Drive 0, Hard Drive 1, etc. We tested the most recent version in Windows 10, 8, and 7, and it worked just as advertised so long as the program ran as an administrator. It should also work for Windows 11 and older versions of Windows.