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Gparted Windows !!hot!! May 2026

Learning GParted without rebooting, or managing external drives that aren’t your boot drive. Method 3: Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) – Not Recommended You might think: “I have WSL – I’ll just apt install gparted !”

If you’ve ever tried to resize a partition, recover lost disk space, or fix a corrupted USB drive on Windows, you’ve probably hit a wall. The built-in Disk Management tool is fine for basic tasks, but the moment you need to move a partition left, shrink a system drive from the boot sector, or recover from a “disk full” error, it falls short. gparted windows

GParted requires a graphical interface and direct hardware access to block devices. WSL does not support USB devices or raw disk access in a safe way for partition editing. GParted requires a graphical interface and direct hardware

Here are the three best ways to do it. This is the most common and reliable method. You create a bootable USB stick with GParted Live, boot your PC from it, and run GParted outside of Windows. This allows you to modify the C: drive itself (something no Windows tool can do while the OS is running). This is the most common and reliable method

You install a lightweight Linux distribution (like Ubuntu or Linux Mint) in a VM, then install GParted within that VM. The VM can access physical drives if you enable “raw disk access.”

So, can you run GParted on Windows? Not directly as an .exe file. But you can absolutely (NTFS, FAT32, exFAT) without installing Linux.