Microsoft Word is a desktop suite with offline access, so real-time Save or Sync not available. This means that if a mishap happens, like power failure, corrupted system or anything that could force the closure of your document in progress, the document may get lost.
Fortunately, Microsoft added some safeguards in its office suite to recover losts documents. There are more than one way to recover a lost Word document depending on the version of Microsoft Word you are using. In this tutorial, we are going to list down the easiest methods to recover a lost word document.
Step One
Recover Lost Documents in Word 2010 and Above - With Word 2010, Microsoft introduced a draft feature in which Word creates a temporary draft of all the documents created in it. The draft is available for up to 4 days, after that, it will be deleted. So if you are using Word 2010 or above and the lost document is still under the 4 days period, follow the following instructions to recover the lost document:Open Microsoft Word, and click on “File” option.Here, navigate to “info” and then, click on “Manage Versions”.You will see a dropdown menu here, click on it and select “Recover Unsaved Documents”.Microsoft Word will provide all recent drafts from which you can select the lost document to open and save it. If this method doesn’t work for any reason, you can also try the methods below.
Step Two
Recover Lost Documents in Word 2007 and Below - Word 2007 and below don’t come with any reliable document recovery system by default. So we will have to depend on unreliable sources and hope that you find your lost document in one of the areas.
Step Three
Method #1: Recover from Autosave - By default, Word auto-saves a document every 10 minutes (this can be decreased or increased, see below) that it will automatically recover if the document closed due to a malfunction. Word will not auto-save a file that has been closed willingly using the Word close button. So this method works best when you have lost the document in an accident.To change auto-save time, click on the word menu on the top left side, and select “Word Options” from it. Now navigate to the “Save” tab and enter the time after which Word should save a document in the empty field next to the option “Save AutoRecovery information every”.
Step Four
The process is simple, if your system breaks down just restart it and launch Microsoft Word. While opening, Word will search if it has any autosave file. If it found any, you will see them on the left side of the blank document. Just click to open in Word and save using the standard save method.
Step Five
Method #:2: Recover from Temporary Files - When you are working on a document, a temporary file is also created that contains the same data. There is a chance that when your system failed, that temporary file didn’t get deleted and you can recover data from it.Temporary files have “.TMP” extension with them and you may have to open them with Notepad if Word doesn’t work. They may contain lots of other codes along with your document content, so you need to copy only the required data. You can access temporary files in the following directory:C:Documents and SettingsAdministratorApplication DataMicrosoftWordYou can also search in the Windows Start menu search bar for “.TMP” to find all files with “.TMP” extensions.