Your files disappear after an accidental format, a power cut corrupts a server volume, or a laptop drive stops mounting without warning. Data recovery services are not just about tools. They are about not making the damage worse while you work out what actually failed.
Data recovery services we handle
We recover data from personal devices and business storage when the failure is logical, electrical, or mechanical. The first step is diagnosis, then a safe capture of the media so recovery work happens on a copy rather than on the original.
- Deleted files, emptied recycle bin, or partition changes.
- Formatted drives, RAW volumes, and corrupted file systems.
- External drives and NAS units that show up but will not open.
- Server and workstation crashes after an update or a sudden shutdown.
How the recovery process works
Good outcomes come from process, not guesswork. We start by confirming symptoms and the last actions taken. Then we create a sector by sector image where possible, verify integrity, and attempt recovery using the right approach for that failure type.
You receive recovered folders plus a short report on what was found and what could not be reconstructed. If the device is a drive or an array, review the service-specific options for hard disk data recovery or RAID data recovery before you try repair software that writes changes to the disk.
What affects recoverability
Two people can lose data in the same way and get different outcomes. What matters is what happened after the loss. Extra writes, repeated restarts, and automated repairs can overwrite or reshape the data you are trying to recover.
- How long the device has been used since the loss.
- Whether the storage is SSD or HDD, and whether the device shows errors.
- Whether encryption is involved and if credentials are available.
- Whether the failure is mechanical (noise, disconnects) or structural (corruption).
What we ask on the first call
Expect a short set of questions. Is the drive making noise? Does it disconnect? Did someone run CHKDSK, initialize the disk, or attempt a rebuild? Was this a sudden power event or a slow decline? These details tell us whether the safest step is to power down, to capture an image, or to extract specific folders first.
Confidential handling for business data
If the data includes customer records, contracts, or internal mail, tell us at intake. We can keep the workflow tight: work from a copy, limit handling to the recovery team, and document what was done. If you need evidence-style documentation, ask up front so the method matches the need.
How to prepare the device for intake
Power the system down and avoid more attempts to fix it in place. If the device is external storage, keep the cable and power adapter with it. If this is business data, note the most important folders and the last known good date. If encryption is in use, keep recovery keys or credentials available, but do not share them until asked.
After you receive recovered data
Do not drop the recovered folders back onto the same failing drive. Use a healthy target disk, confirm key files open, and then make a clean backup. If the original device showed warnings or read errors, plan to replace it. Recovery is a rescue, not a repair.
Start a data recovery request
Use our contact page to request data recovery services. Share the device type, what happened just before the loss, and whether the drive is making unusual sounds so we can advise the safest next step.