File History drive disconnected? Follow 4 proven fixes to reconnect your drive, plus a free, more reliable backup alternative - one that will never disconnect the drive.
You set up File History to automatically back up your files. Weeks or months pass. Then one day, you open the settings and freeze, showing an error: "Reconnect your drive. Your File History drive was disconnected for too long."Your backups stopped running. You just didn't know it.
The problem: This error is shockingly common. It can happen because of a simple drive letter change, USB power settings, or a corrupted configuration. And when it does, your documents, photos, and work are left completely unprotected- no warning, no alert, no backup.
What you'll get from this guide:
Keep reading- your future backups depend on it.
If your File History drive keeps showing "File History drive was disconnected", you're not alone. This error has several common causes, and most are surprisingly easy to fix once you know where to look.
Before you start troubleshooting, confirm whether the problem is with File History itself or with your actual drive.
Once you know the real cause, you can jump straight to the fix that works.
Before you panic or assume your backups are lost forever, try these proven fixes. Each solution addresses one of the common causes we identified earlier. Start with Fix 1, which solves the majority of cases, and work your way down. No technical expertise required.
Windows sometimes reassigns drive letters when you connect multiple USB devices or after a system update. File History remembers the original drive letter. By giving your backup drive back its original identity, File History instantly recognizes it again.
Step 1. Press Win + R to open the Run window, type diskmgmt.msc, and press Enter to open Disk Management.
Step 2. Look for your backup drive (with the correct size and no "Healthy" warning). Right-click the drive and select Change Drive Letter and Paths.
Step 3. Click Change and select the original drive letter from the drop-down menu (e.g., E:). Then, click OK.
Step 4. After reassigning the drive letter, open Control Panel > File History > click Turn on to restart File History and see if it recognizes the backup drive.
In Windows, due to power-saving features, your external backup drive will go to sleep after a period of inactivity, and File History thinks it's been unplugged. Disabling this feature keeps your drive awake and ready for scheduled backups.
Step 1. Go to Control Panel>Power Options and click Change plan settings next to your active power plan.
Step 2. Click Change advanced power settings.
Step 3. Scroll to USB settings >USB selective suspend setting and set it to Disabled from the drop-down menu. Click Apply>OK.
Step 4. Restart your computer and reconnect your backup drive.
Over time, File History's internal tracking database can become corrupted, especially after interrupted backups or system crashes. Resetting clears the corrupted configuration while leaving your actual backup files untouched. Think of it as giving File History a fresh start.
Step 1. Press Win + R to open the Run window, type services.msc, and press Enter to access the Services window.
Step 2. Find File History Service in the list, right-click it, and select Stop.
Step 3. Open File Explorer, navigate to your backup drive, and delete the FileHistory folder. This removes the configuration, not your original files.
Step 4. Go back to Services, right-click File History Service, and select Start.
Step 6. Open Control Panel > File History and select your backup drive to turn on File History backup.
Bad sectors, file system corruption, or physical errors on your backup drive can cause intermittent disconnections. Windows includes a built-in repair tool that scans for disk issues and fixes many of them automatically. This is especially important if your drive is older or has been unplugged improperly.
Step 1. Open File Explorer, right-click your backup drive, and select Properties.
Step 2. Go to the Tools tab and click Check under "Error checking".
Step 3. If prompted, select Scan drive. Wait for the scan to complete. This may take several minutes to over an hour for large drives.
Alternatively, type cmd in the search box and select Run as administrator. Then, type: chkdsk X: /f/r and press Enter in the Command Prompt window. Replace X with your drive letter.
Similarly, you need to check if File History is “On” with a scheduled next backup time. If the error persists, your backup drive may be physically failing, consider replacing it and switching to a more reliable backup solution.
File History only backs up your primary user folders (Documents, Photos, etc.), ignores system files and programs, breaks easily when drive letters change, and gives no alert when backups fail.
If “File History” still disconnects randomly, or if you're tired of constantly monitoring your backups, it's time to consider a more reliable alternative. The good news is: you don't have to pay for a premium solution. There's already a free and highly trustworthy alternative available.
AOMEI Backupper Standard is a free backup tool that offers you more flexible options, not limited to just files.
Follow these steps to create more reliable, worry-free backups.
Step 1. Open AOMEI Backupper Standard after installing. Then, go to Backup > File Backup. You can also select other backup solutions (if needed).
Step 2. Click Select Source > This PC/NAS/Network Share to add any file and folder you want to protect. To add two or more files or folders, click Add Source.
Step 3. To add two or more files or folders, click Add Source. Then, click the PC icon to select a destination, from local drives to network share, NAS, AOMEI Cloud.
Step 4. To backup files automatically, click Schedule to enable Daily, Weekly, Monthly(By Date), Event Triggers, etc., and click OK. At last, click Start Backup.
For more advanced features, upgrade to AOMEI Backupper Professional. Try Differential Backup for fast recovery and Automatic Backup Cleanup to proactively delete backups.
Once you've fixed the immediate issue, take these proactive steps to ensure your backups stay connected and reliable. With just a few minor adjustments, you can avoid encountering the same problem again.
“File History drive disconnected" error is common, and while the fixes above can help, you probably don’t want to keep running into this issue. You deserve a better backup system than one that fails silently and without warning.
For critical files, such as photos, documents, work projects, try AOMEI Backupper Standard. It's free, far more reliable than File History, and it won't lose your backup drive due to simple letter changes or power settings.
Download AOMEI Backupper Standard today. Spend just 5 minutes setting up a scheduled backup, giving you true peace of mind and knowing your data is always protected- no more surprises, no more disconnections.