How do I open the Recycle Bin from the command line?
I'd be very glad if there is a built-in Windows command.
Super User is a question and answer site for computer enthusiasts and power users. It only takes a minute to sign up.
Sign up to join this communityOn the command line, type
start shell:RecycleBinFolder
It is not case sensitive, so you can just type start shell:recyclebinfolder
.
An alternative is to use the Run dialog (menu Start/Run or Win + R) - there is less to type. Type
shell:RecycleBinFolder
and press OK (or hit Enter).
This method works on all versions of Windows, at least back to Windows 2000.
(Depending on the OS and filesystem, the directory may be $Recycle.bin
, Recycled
, or Recycler
.)
To open the Recycle Bin window (showing deleted objects on all drives):
C:\> start ::{645FF040-5081-101B-9F08-00AA002F954E}
or
C:\> start shell:RecycleBinFolder
or
C:\> start C:\$Recycle.bin
To list deleted objects on a specific drive:
C:\> dir /s/a <driveletter>:\$Recycle.Bin
(NB, the original filenames will not be shown in this mode.)
start C:\$Recycle.bin
just gave me an empty directory. I needed to use start shell:RecycleBinFolder
This should work. Tested on Windows 7 successfully.
Open a command prompt and enter
CD \$Recycle.Bin
Set-Location: Cannot find path 'D:\.Bin' because it does not exist.
None of the previous 'run' commands for Recycle Bin worked on my Windows 10 machine. The start shell:RecycleBinFolder
from inside the command window worked. I could not however find a way to have the system display the usual desktop icon. None of the solutions worked. I was however able to re-create the icon by making an Internet Explorer shortcut:
Target = "C:\Program Files\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe" shell:RecycleBinFolder
And then changing the icon to the expected icon by browsing the shell icon DLL file. I now have it back...
Windows button on keyboard + R;
then type "shell:RecycleBinFolder
"
and press Enter:
This will take you into the Recycle bin folder and shows the deleted items.
Items deleted using "Shift + Delete" won't be available in Recycle bin because they are permanently deleted. These items can be recovered using data recovery software like Easerus data recovery
Tried and worked perfectly on Windows 10.
Shift + Delete
was new to the thread and relevant (IMHO).