“Unmountable boot volume” after resizing Windows partition











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I dualboot Windows 10/Ubuntu. I resized the Windows partition from in Ubuntu, and now when I try to boot Windows I get the "Unmountable Boot Volume" error. I tried a few fixes I found online, like going to CMD from the recovery menu and typing "bootrec /fixboot" but I get an "access denied" error. Not sure what to do from here. If possible, I'd at least like to save some of my files before doing a clean install (if it comes to that), but ideally I'd like to save my Windows installation.










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  • Just resizing should not cause a problem. Did you add another partition before the windows partition? If the partition number changes or the partition is corrupted there will be a problem. Accessing data also should not be an issue. The partition should still be mountable in Linux or Windows even if you can’t boot the OS. What have you tried so far to troubleshoot?
    – Appleoddity
    yesterday










  • Okay, so I deleted the partition that I created with the space made from shrinking the Windows partition, and added that space back to the Windows partition and it booted. So I guess it was because the partition table was changed. I feel dumb now. Thanks so much!
    – Tre Babcock
    yesterday















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I dualboot Windows 10/Ubuntu. I resized the Windows partition from in Ubuntu, and now when I try to boot Windows I get the "Unmountable Boot Volume" error. I tried a few fixes I found online, like going to CMD from the recovery menu and typing "bootrec /fixboot" but I get an "access denied" error. Not sure what to do from here. If possible, I'd at least like to save some of my files before doing a clean install (if it comes to that), but ideally I'd like to save my Windows installation.










share|improve this question







New contributor




Tre Babcock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Just resizing should not cause a problem. Did you add another partition before the windows partition? If the partition number changes or the partition is corrupted there will be a problem. Accessing data also should not be an issue. The partition should still be mountable in Linux or Windows even if you can’t boot the OS. What have you tried so far to troubleshoot?
    – Appleoddity
    yesterday










  • Okay, so I deleted the partition that I created with the space made from shrinking the Windows partition, and added that space back to the Windows partition and it booted. So I guess it was because the partition table was changed. I feel dumb now. Thanks so much!
    – Tre Babcock
    yesterday













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I dualboot Windows 10/Ubuntu. I resized the Windows partition from in Ubuntu, and now when I try to boot Windows I get the "Unmountable Boot Volume" error. I tried a few fixes I found online, like going to CMD from the recovery menu and typing "bootrec /fixboot" but I get an "access denied" error. Not sure what to do from here. If possible, I'd at least like to save some of my files before doing a clean install (if it comes to that), but ideally I'd like to save my Windows installation.










share|improve this question







New contributor




Tre Babcock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I dualboot Windows 10/Ubuntu. I resized the Windows partition from in Ubuntu, and now when I try to boot Windows I get the "Unmountable Boot Volume" error. I tried a few fixes I found online, like going to CMD from the recovery menu and typing "bootrec /fixboot" but I get an "access denied" error. Not sure what to do from here. If possible, I'd at least like to save some of my files before doing a clean install (if it comes to that), but ideally I'd like to save my Windows installation.







windows-10 ubuntu hard-drive boot partitioning






share|improve this question







New contributor




Tre Babcock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




Tre Babcock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






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Tre Babcock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









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New contributor




Tre Babcock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





Tre Babcock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Tre Babcock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Just resizing should not cause a problem. Did you add another partition before the windows partition? If the partition number changes or the partition is corrupted there will be a problem. Accessing data also should not be an issue. The partition should still be mountable in Linux or Windows even if you can’t boot the OS. What have you tried so far to troubleshoot?
    – Appleoddity
    yesterday










  • Okay, so I deleted the partition that I created with the space made from shrinking the Windows partition, and added that space back to the Windows partition and it booted. So I guess it was because the partition table was changed. I feel dumb now. Thanks so much!
    – Tre Babcock
    yesterday


















  • Just resizing should not cause a problem. Did you add another partition before the windows partition? If the partition number changes or the partition is corrupted there will be a problem. Accessing data also should not be an issue. The partition should still be mountable in Linux or Windows even if you can’t boot the OS. What have you tried so far to troubleshoot?
    – Appleoddity
    yesterday










  • Okay, so I deleted the partition that I created with the space made from shrinking the Windows partition, and added that space back to the Windows partition and it booted. So I guess it was because the partition table was changed. I feel dumb now. Thanks so much!
    – Tre Babcock
    yesterday
















Just resizing should not cause a problem. Did you add another partition before the windows partition? If the partition number changes or the partition is corrupted there will be a problem. Accessing data also should not be an issue. The partition should still be mountable in Linux or Windows even if you can’t boot the OS. What have you tried so far to troubleshoot?
– Appleoddity
yesterday




Just resizing should not cause a problem. Did you add another partition before the windows partition? If the partition number changes or the partition is corrupted there will be a problem. Accessing data also should not be an issue. The partition should still be mountable in Linux or Windows even if you can’t boot the OS. What have you tried so far to troubleshoot?
– Appleoddity
yesterday












Okay, so I deleted the partition that I created with the space made from shrinking the Windows partition, and added that space back to the Windows partition and it booted. So I guess it was because the partition table was changed. I feel dumb now. Thanks so much!
– Tre Babcock
yesterday




Okay, so I deleted the partition that I created with the space made from shrinking the Windows partition, and added that space back to the Windows partition and it booted. So I guess it was because the partition table was changed. I feel dumb now. Thanks so much!
– Tre Babcock
yesterday















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