DATA RECOVERY
USB Flash Drive Data Recovery
Learn how to effectively recover data from a USB flash drive using StrongRecovery. Our software allows you to quickly restore lost photos, documents and files from formatted, damaged or unrecognised USB drives and flash memory cards.
Losing data from a USB flash drive can be frustrating and stressful, especially when the files involved are important or irreplaceable. Fortunately, there are effective ways to recover them. This article walks you through the recovery process step by step, explains which tools work best, and provides practical tips to help you avoid data loss in the future.
Most Common Causes of Data Loss on USB Flash Drives
Accidental formatting: Do not save any new files to the drive. Every byte of new data reduces the chance of a successful recovery.
"Drive not formatted" error: This is a logical file system error, not physical damage. StrongRecovery is designed to handle exactly these situations and can access the underlying data even when Windows cannot.
Accidental file deletion
How to Recover Data from a USB Flash Drive in 3 Steps
Step 1
Launch StrongRecovery and select the USB flash drive from the drive list. If the drive's partition has been lost and it does not appear with an assigned drive letter or file system, follow the instructions for partition recovery.
Step 2
Once the drive is selected, StrongRecovery begins its analysis immediately. While the scan is in progress, you can already browse the reconstructed directory tree and start recovering files you need. You can also switch to thumbnail view for photos (menu → View or press F12):
Step 3
Select the files and folders you want to restore and click "Recover" from the main menu or right-click context menu. You will then be asked to choose a destination folder. Always save recovered files to a different drive – never back to the source USB drive, as doing so risks overwriting the very data you are trying to recover.
StrongRecovery also performs a DEEP SCAN of the USB drive, searching for raw file signatures (RAW files +). If the scan has completed or a satisfying number of RAW files has been found (photos or other media), you can begin recovering them immediately. Raw file detection works independently of the file system by identifying file headers, which means files can be recovered even when file system metadata – such as allocation data, file names, dates and attributes – has been lost or corrupted.
Video Guide: Recovering Data from a Damaged USB Flash Drive
Why StrongRecovery Is the Best Choice for USB Flash Drive Recovery
Recovers data in the most common real-world scenarios:
After accidental deletion
After formatting the drive
After logical damage (corrupted file system, RAW drive)
Uses advanced recovery algorithms at both the file system level and the raw data level via deep scanning (DEEP SCAN)
Supports photo thumbnail preview (including RAW camera formats), video preview and HEX view
Built-in search lets you quickly locate exactly the files you need among thousands of recovered items
Can also extract embedded thumbnail images from within photo files, giving you an additional chance to recover a usable version
The deep scan engine covers an exceptionally wide range of file formats typically found on USB drives – photos, videos, documents, archives and project files. The software was specifically enhanced to handle the variety of content users carry on flash drives
Warning: The “chkdsk” trap
Many users try to repair a USB flash drive using the system command chkdsk
. Unfortunately, this is the biggest mistake you can make before attempting proper USB data recovery.
"I remember a case of a lady who brought me her flash drive after trying to fix it herself. She followed some 'good advice' from the internet and ran a disk check. Instead of saving her photos, chkdsk treated the damaged file fragments as structural errors and… 'fixed' them by deleting them. What I could have recovered in 5 minutes turned into a fight for every byte, because the system overwrote critical information about file locations."
— Maciej Drobiński, author of StrongRecovery
Why is chkdsk harmful?
It doesn’t recover — it removes: Its purpose is to enforce file system consistency, not to protect your photos or documents. If a file appears “corrupted”, chkdsk simply deletes it.
It overwrites data: Repairing errors involves writing to the USB drive, which can permanently destroy recoverable deleted files.
Misleading free advice: Some companies promote this method knowing that once chkdsk damages the structure, users are forced to pay for expensive laboratory recovery.
Golden rule: Always start with StrongRecovery (it works in read‑only mode). Only after securing your files on another drive should you attempt repairing the USB device.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
USB Flash Drive Data Recovery

