Windows 11, like its predecessor, includes easy options to encrypt your system drive. With device encryption turned on for your PC’s system drive, your personal data is safe if your laptop is lost or stolen. If Windows determines that boot integrity has been compromised, it will demand a recovery key (a 48-digit number, divided into eight groups of six numbers each) before it unlocks the information.
As millions of people discovered during the CrowdStrike meltdown, Windows can demand that recovery key when you least expect it. There are also a handful of scenarios that can throw you into the recovery-key zone without warning. This is why you want to ensure you always have ready access to the recovery key when you need it.
Also: How to install Windows 11 the way you want (and bypass Microsoft’s restrictions)
If you use the built-in Windows device encryption option, Windows automatically saves the encryption key to your Microsoft account. Go to https://microsoft.com/recoverykey and sign in with your Microsoft account (personal or business) to access that key from any device. If you prefer a command line, open PowerShell and use this command to view details about encryption on the system drive, including the recovery key:
(Get-BitLockerVolume -MountPoint C).KeyProtector
If you’re running Windows 11 Pro, Windows prompts you to save the recovery key when you first turn on BitLocker encryption. Windows gives you three options for saving a recovery key. You can save the key to your Microsoft account (personal or business), save the key to a text file you save on a storage device of your choosing, or send that key to a printer and save the hard copy in a safe location. If you’re the belt-and-suspenders type, you can do all three.
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Any time after that, you can save a fresh copy of the key by going to the Manage BitLocker Control Panel. Just type a few letters of the word BitLocker in the search box to find it. Click “Back up your recovery key” to open the dialog box shown here: