Guide: How to format an external drive to work seamlessly with Macs and PCs without. Out of the box, Windows can not read or write HFS drives, and Macs are.
This answer explains how to format a drive in the exFAT or FAT32 file system. This allows the drive to be used on both Windows and macOS.*END
A Western Digital external hard drive can be used on both Windows and macOS. This is useful if a drive is being used under both Operating System (OS) to move files between the two environments. Most WD Drives come formatted in the NTFS (Windows) or HFS+ (macOS) format.
For a hard drive to be able to be read from and written to on both a Windows and macOS computer, it must be formatted to ExFAT or FAT32 file format. FAT32 has several limitations, including a 4 GB per-file limit. This is a file system limitation that affects both macOS's and Window's, and the only workaround is to format the drive to exFAT. For more information about what these limitations are please see Answer ID 20778: File and partition size limitations using the FAT32 file system (Windows and Mac).
The easiest way to format the drive to FAT32 or ExFAT is by using macOS's built-in Disk Utility for FAT32, or both macOS and Windows' built-in tools, Disk Utility or Disk Management respectively for exFAT.
Critical: The instructions in the article below are designed to help repartition and format a hard drive. This process is Data Destructive and cannot be undone. Once the process begins, ALL THE DATA ON THE DRIVE WILL BE LOST! |
Critical: Never attempt to connect any external drive to multiple computers at the same time. This could quickly damage the drive's partition and corrupt the data on the drive. |
exFAT | ||||
10.11 (El Capitan) and above | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) | |||
10.10 (Yosemite) and earlier | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) | |||
Windows 10 | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) | |||
Windows 8 and earlier | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) | |||
Unix/Linux (All Distributions) | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) |
FAT32 | ||||
10.11 (El Capitan) and above - Recommended Method | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) | |||
10.10 (Yosemite) and earlier- Recommended Method | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) | |||
Windows 10 and earlier | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) | |||
Unix/Linux (All Distributions) | Click Here for Instructions (instructions will appear below this table) |
Please select the Operating System (OS) in which the drive is to be formatted from the list above to display the instructions.
exFAT in macOS 10.11 (El Capitan) and above
There are two easy ways to format a drive to use ExFAT is by using macOS's built-in Disk Utility; using Erase (Step 4) or Partition (Step 7). For instructions on how to do this, please see the instructions below:
- Connect the WD drive to the Mac computer.
- Double left-click on the Mac HD, the internal Mac hard drive visible on the top-right corner of the desktop screen. Choose Applications from the left-side panel. From the Applications folder, open Utilities, and lastly double-click on Disk Utility.
- Disk Utility will now be open. From the left-side pane, choose the drive that is to be re-formatted. Typically there are two listings for each drive unless more than one partition exists on a particular drive. Choose the drive listing that is farthest to the left (Not indented) for the drive to be formatted. It is usually directly above the name of the drive. In the example below, the one to be selected would be WD Elements SE....
- After selecting the appropriate drive, additional option buttons will become available on the top part of the Disk Utility window. Click on Erase.
- The Erase dialog window will now appear. Assign the name that will be given to the drive.
- Select the Format (file system) from the drop-down menu. For this article, we chose exFAT, see image below.
- Select the Scheme (Partition Table Scheme) from the drop-down menu. See image below.
- Click Erase to begin the format process.
- When the Erasing process is completed, click on Done.
- Click on Partition on the top menu of the Disk Utility window.
- The Partition window will now appear. Click next to Format to display a drop-down menu, and select exFAT. This is the format that the drive will be formatted to.
- Confirm that the name of the drive is correct in the Partition area, and update it if necessary. When ready, click Apply.
- Disk Utility will begin the formatting and repartitioning process. This may take several minutes. Note:
If an error message is received stating that the drive is unable to be unmounted, this means that there is a program or service currently reading or writing data on the drive. Determine what program is accessing the drive and shut it down before trying to format the drive again. If the error message persists, restarting the computer may resolve the issue. If additional assistance is required, please Contact Us. - When finished, the drive will be formatted and repartitioned successfully. Click on Done.
Erase
Note: | Only legacy macOS systems, using non-Intel CPU's, will utilize the Apple Partition Map. It is best to use Master Boot Record only for MS DOS format. All Intel-based macOS computers and drives larger than 2 Terabytes should use the GUID Partition Map. |
Partition
exFAT in macOS 10.10 (Yosemite) and earlier
One of the easiest ways to format a drive to use ExFAT is by using macOS's built-in Disk Utility. For instructions on how to do this, please see the instructions below:
- Begin by connecting the WD drive to the Mac computer.
- Once the drive appears on the desktop, click on Go on the top tool bar. From the drop-down menu, click on Utilities.
- In Utilities, select and open Disk Utility.
- When Disk Utility opens, select the drive that is to be partitioned and formatted from the left-side panel. Typically there are two listings for each drive, unless there is more than one partition on a particular drive. Choose the drive listing that is farthest to the left for the drive that will be formatted. It is usually directly above the name of the drive, and is the drive selection that has the total size being displayed. Once selected, click on Partition on the right-side area.
- In the Partition area, click under Partition Layout and select 1 Partition. Then, click on Options.
- In the Options window select Master Boot Record and then click Ok.
- To the right, insert a name for the drive, and click on Format. From the drop-down, select ExFAT. When done, click on Apply.
- A window will come up showing that formatting and partitioning the drive will erase all data that is on the drive. If there's no needed information within the drive, then click on Partition. If there is data on the drive that is needed or is not backed up, it will need to be copied to another location before proceeding.
- The drive is now formatting and a status bar will be seen at the bottom that says formatting the disk and gives the name of the drive, the format it is applying, and the name that was specified. When it is done, this bar will go away and the drive should now be listed on the desktop.
exFAT in Windows 10
Another easy way to format a drive to use ExFAT is by using Windows' built-in Disk Management. For instructions on how to do this, please see the instructions below:
- Right-click on Start, the Windows logo on the bottom-left of the screen, and click Disk Management.
- In the Disk Management window, the lower pane will display a list of available drives. Identify the drive that needs to be partitioned and formatted, and make sure that all critical data on this drive has been backed up elsewhere. If there is already a partition on the drive, the bar above that drive will appear blue. If there is no critical data on the drive, or the data has been successfully backed up, right-click the bar and click Delete Volume.
Important: If Disk Management shows the drive as Not Initialized, the drive will have to be initialized. For assistance initializing a hard drive, please see Answer ID 18824: How to initialize or write a signature to a secondary hard drive or Solid State drive in Windows. - If there is no partition and data on the drive, it will appear as Unallocated, with a black bar on top. Right-click the Unallocated space or the black bar, and click New Simple Volume.
- The Welcome to the New Simple Volume Wizard will open. Click Next to proceed.
- Choose the volume size and click Next. By default, the maximum disk space is already selected and it is recommended to leave it at the maximum disk space. Note:
To create multiple partitions, select or type a specific number of megabytes (MB) for the first partition and continue to the next step. Once done with this process, the remaining space will display as unallocated space. Now, create another New Simple Volume in the remaining unallocated space for the next partition. For example, on a 2TB drive, set the volume size to 1000000 (1 TB) and continue to the next step. When done, begin the New Simple Volume process again and select the remaining capacity, the unallocated space, for another 1TB partition. - Assign a drive letter to represent the volume being created, and click Next. By default, this is the next available letter.
- Next is the File System, which controls how the data is read and written. Set the file system to exFAT, will leave the Allocation unit size to Default. The Volume Label field can be customized in order to give the volume a desired name, such as My Book or WD Black 1. Check the box labeled Perform a quick format and click Next.
- Click Finish to begin formatting the drive.
- When complete, the drive will appear with a blue bar as in the image below.
exFAT in Windows 8 and earlier
Another easy way to format a drive to use ExFAT is by using Windows' built-in Disk Management. For instructions on how to do this, please see the instructions below:
- Open Disk Management. In Windows 8 this can be achieved by moving the mouse to the bottom-left corner of the Desktop and right-clicking on top of the Start menu screen.
Important: On Windows 7, Vista, or XP, instead click on Start, right-click on top of Computer and click on Manage. Then, click Disk Management right below Storage. - From the menu, click on Disk Management.Note:
On other versions of Windows, Disk Management can be accessed through Control Panel, going to System >Administrative Tools >Computer Management. - Disk Management will display the various disks that are available in that system. Locate the desired drive by looking at the drive information and drive size. When ready, right-click on top of the drive that is to be re-partitioned and reformatted, and click on New Simple Volume....
- The New Simple Volume Wizard will appear. Click on Next.
- Leave the size of the volume to be the maximum disk space so it has only one volume. Click on Next.
- Assign a drive letter for the drive to have once the process is at an end. Windows will automatically assign one, but this may be changed if so desired. When ready, click on Next.
- In the Format Partition section, select the File System to be exFAT and change the Volume Label to a desired name for the drive. Make sure the Perform a quick format check-box is highlighted, and when ready click on Next.
- The Wizard will display a summary of the selected settings for review. It is important to know that formatting and partitioning the drive will erase all data that is on the drive. If there's no needed information within the drive, then click on Partition. If there is data on the drive that is needed or is not backed up, it will need to be copied to another location before proceeding. If ready, click on Finish.
- The drive will indicate that it's Formatting for a few seconds, and once done, it will display as a Healthy (Primary Partition), and the drive will be available in the Computer area of Windows under the assigned drive letter.
Unix/Linux (All Distributions)
Western Digital technical support only provides jumper configuration (for internal hard drive) and physical installation support for hard drives used in systems running the Linux/Unix operating systems. For setup questions beyond physical installation of your Western Digital hard drive, please contact your Linux/Unix vendor. You may also wish to post on our Community Forums for assistance from other users of our products who may be able to assist you with your issue.
FAT32 in macOS 10.11 (El Capitan) and above
The easiest way to format a drive to use FAT32 is by using macOS's built-in Disk Utility. For instructions on how to do this, please see the instructions below:
- Begin by connecting the WD drive to the Mac computer.
- Once that's done, double left-click on the Mac HD, the internal Mac hard drive visible on the top-right corner of the desktop screen. Choose Applications from the left-side panel. While in there, open Utilities, and lastly double-click on Disk Utility
- When Disk Utility opens, all available drives will display on the left-side panel.
- From said list, select the drive that is to be partitioned and formatted from the left-side panel. Typically there are two listings for each drive, unless there is more than one partition on a particular drive. Choose the drive listing that is farthest to the left for the drive that will be formatted. It is usually directly above the name of the drive. Once selected, click on Partition on the top area of the Disk Utility window.
- The Partition window will now appear. Next to Partition, assign the desired drive name for the device.
- Click on the drop-down next to Format and from the drop-down menu select MS-DOS (FAT). This is the format that the drive will be formatted to.
- Now, click on Apply.
- Disk Utility will begin the formatting and repartitioning process. This may take several minutes. Note:
If an error message is received stating that the drive is unable to be unmounted, this means that there is a program or service currently reading or writing data on the drive. Determine what program is accessing the drive and shut it down before trying to format the drive again. If the error message persists, restarting the computer may resolve the issue. - When finished, the drive will be formatted and repartitioned successfully. Click on Done.
FAT32 in macOS 10.10 (Yosemite) and earlier
The easiest way to format a drive to use FAT32 is by using macOS's built-in Disk Utility. For instructions on how to do this, please see the instructions below:
- Begin by connecting the WD drive to the Mac computer.
- Once the drive appears on the desktop, click on Go on the top tool bar. From the drop-down menu, click on Utilities.
- In Utilities, select and open Disk Utility.
- When Disk Utility opens, select the drive that is to be partitioned and formatted from the left-side panel. Typically there are two listings for each drive, unless there is more than one partition on a particular drive. Choose the drive listing that is farthest to the left for the drive that will be formatted. It is usually directly above the name of the drive, and is the drive selection that has the total size of the drive being displayed. Once selected, click on Partition on the right-side area.
- In the Partition area, click under Partition Layout and select 1 Partition. Then, click on Options.
- In the Options window select Master Boot Record and then click Ok.
- To the right, insert a name for the drive, and click on Format. From the drop-down, select MS-DOS (FAT). When done, click on Apply.
- A window will come up showing that formatting and partitioning the drive will erase all data that is on the drive. If there's no needed information within the drive, then click on Partition. If there is data on the drive that is needed or is not backed up, it will need to be copied to another location before proceeding.
- The drive is now formatting and a status bar will be seen at the bottom that says formatting the disk and gives the name of the drive, the format it is applying, and the name that was specified. When it is done, this bar will go away and the drive should now be listed on the desktop.
FAT32 in Windows 10 and earlier
Important: Windows 10, 8, 7, Vista, and XP can only (using the actual operating system itself) create FAT32 partitions that are 32 GB or smaller. In order to format a drive larger than 32 GB using Windows OS, additional software may be required. Western Digital provides the Acronis True Image WD Edition software that allows users of our internal hard drives to format their drives. Users of our external drives will need to find third-party software to accomplish this task. |
Using Acronis True Image WD Edition for Windows (For Western Digital internal hard drives)
Acronis True Image WD Edition can format any capacity internal single drive unit made by Western Digital. Please see the following article on how to format a drive to FAT32 using Acronis True Image WD Edition: Answer ID 23035: How to partition and format a WD drive using Acronis True Image WD Edition.
Using Third-Party Software (For newer (made after 2007) external hard drives)
As Windows is unable to format a drive over 32 GB in FAT32, the use of third-party software is required. Western Digital cannot assist in acquiring or using third-party software to format a drive as FAT32. There are many different applications (many of them free) that can accomplish this. We recommend doing a search on Google or Bing by Microsoft for more information. Should a Mac computer be available, we are able to provide support for formatting the drive as FAT32 under that OS. Another option is to ask on our Community Forums for community assistance in finding or using a FAT32 formatting application.
Using the FAT32 Formatter for older WD drives
Western Digital has a Windows based utility that will reformat an older Western Digital external USB or FireWire hard drive back to the factory default FAT32 partition. The FAT32 formatter software is only for older external single drive units and can only format a drive that is 1TB and below. It will not work on an external drive that is greater than 1TB in size. It also may not work on models released after 2007.
When run, this utility can only create a single FAT32 partition for the full capacity of the hard drive. Please follow the directions below to download and use the Western Digital FAT32 formatting utility.
- Download the External USB/ Firewire Fat32 formatting utility (select the product being formatted from the list first).
- Double-click on the file named ExtFat32_vs2.00.zip and follow the onscreen prompts to install this program onto the computer. The file may need to be uncompressed using some type of uncompression or unzipping utility.
- Check the box labeled I accept this License Agreement and click Next.
- Select the hard drive that is to be formatted and click on Start.
Critical: All data on the target hard drive will be erased during this process. Please remove or backup any valuable data before performing this step. - A pop-up message will appear warning that formatting the drive will erase all the data on the device. Click on Ok to continue.
- The final popup will warn again that this will erase all the data on the drive. If this is the desired course of action, click on Yes.
Unix/Linux (All Distributions)
Western Digital technical support only provides jumper configuration (for internal hard drive) and physical installation support for hard drives used in systems running the Linux/Unix operating systems. For setup questions beyond physical installation of your Western Digital hard drive, please contact your Linux/Unix vendor. You may also wish to post on our Community Forums for assistance from other users of our products who may be able to assist you with your issue.
Apple's Time Machine is the go-to backup method for many Mac users. Apple's termination of the AirPort series puts some users in a lurch over how they will be continuing to back up their Macs using Time Machine when Time Capsule is no more. Luckily there a few Apple approved Time Machine backup optionssans Time Capsule.
However, not everyone will be able or willing to use a spare Mac as a backup location or attach yet another external drive or even buy an expensive Time Machine capable NAS. There do exist other hacked solutions that will allow you to use any networked location — including a Windows share. Although this method cobbles together various utilities to make it function (and as such could be subject to points of failure), you can easily set up Time Machine to use a non-approved location for backups. Here's how!
The problem
The issue that makes Time Machine more difficult in terms of options for backup locations is that it requires use of Apple's proprietary HFS+ filesystem. Although I'm certain the HFS+ features that Time Machine uses for file versioning and linking could be 'mimicked' for use on other more open filesystems, the reality is that Apple chose HFS+ and supports that filesystem exclusively in Time Machine (in fact as of this writing Apple's new APFS isn't even supported for Time Machine backups as of yet).
Create a Windows share location
I won't go into detail on how to create a shared folder on a Windows PC but before you begin, you'll need to have a share created and accessible to your Mac that you want to run Time Machine on. For example, if you have a Windows PC named 'Server' and a network shared folder on the Windows PC named 'share', you'd be able to test for connectivity by doing the following:
- Start Finder.
- Click GO > Connect to Server.
- Enter smb://Server/Share where 'server' is the name of the Windows PC and 'share' is the name of the shared folder.
- Click Connect.
If you've properly set everything up, you'll be prompted to enter a registered user and password. Make certain to save those credentials to your keychain for the OS to automatically use those credentials for connecting to the share for future access. You should also see that share in Finder in your 'Shared' section and see the 'Eject' icon next to it since it is now mounted.
Create a sparsebundle image
We now need to create an 'image' file that will, in essence, pretend to be an HFS+ filesystem for your Mac to back up to.
- Start Disk Utility.
- Go to File > New Image > Blank Image.
- Rename the Save As to TimeMachine.
- Press the Down Arrow next to Save As.
- Select your mounted Share.
- Rename the Name of your sparsebundle.
- Select the Size of the backup location. Be generous. If you want to be able to at the very least backup the entire contents of a full hard drive, elect a size at least equal to your Macintosh HD drive size. As a word of warning, the size you choose will be the size of the disk space that will be immediately created on the remote share.
- Make certain that the Format is set to Mac OS Extended (Journaled).
- Click Save. This will take a while especially if you set a large file size.
- Click Done.
Make the remote share automatically mount
In order for this hack to survive reboots, we need to ensure that the remote share is automatically mounted when you restart your Mac. Here is a simple way to get this done. Some drawbacks of this method are that it only works once you've logged in and it won't work for other users of your Mac.
- Start System Preferences.
- Select Users & Groups.
- Select your Username.
- Click Login Items.
- Click the +.
- Navigate to and select your mounted share and TimeMachine.dmg file we created earlier.
- Click Add.
You may need to unmount the share before this can take effect but as of this moment, that share will automatically mount every time you reboot and log in.
Make Time Machine use the remote share and file
Finally, we're ready to make Time Machine see and use the Windows 10 share housing our sparsebundle file.
- Start Terminal.
- Enter the command sudo tmutil setdestination /Volumes/TimeMachine/ where 'TimeMachine' is the name you gave to your sparsebundle you created with Disk Utility.
- Enter your Password.
Check Time Machine
Now we just need to check that Time Machine sees the disk and is ready to use it for backups.
- Start System Preferences.
- Select Time Machine.
- You should now see that Time Machine has a backup location and Select Disk shows the proper name of the sparsebundle.
Final Comments
Yes, this is far and away from the simple 'just works' ideology that Apple is famous for. But if you have no other choice, it works for our Time Machine purposes. Do you have any comments or questions? Let us know in the comment section!
macOS Catalina
Main
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