On Windows 11 (or 10), you can enable BitLocker (or Device Encryption) to protect your files using data encryption to prevent unauthorized access.
If you must erase a drive using encryption with BitLocker, you can use GParted, a Linux-based tool to manage partitions that allows you to delete and format any drive regardless of whether it’s using encryption.
In this guide, I will teach you the steps to wipe a drive when you can’t turn off encryption that has a Windows 10 or Windows 11 installation.
Wipe out a drive encrypted with BitLocker using GParted
If you still can’t erase the BitLocker encrypted drive, you will have to download and create a bootable GParted USB.
Create a GParted bootable USB
To create a GParted bootable media, connect a USB flash drive with at least 2GB of space to a different device and use these steps:
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Download tuxboot from SourceForge.
Quick note: Although the tool hasn’t been updated in quite some time, it still works to create bootable media on Windows 11 or 10. -
Double-click the tuxboot-x.x.x.exe file.
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Click the Yes button to bypass the “unknown publisher” warning.
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Select the On-Line Distribution option.
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Choose the gparted-live-stable option.
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Select the USB Drive option in the “Type” setting.
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Choose the USB flash drive form the “Drive” setting.
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Click the OK button.
Once you complete the steps, tuxboot will create a USB bootable media with GParted, which you can use to boot your computer and wipe out the encrypted drive in question.
Format drive with BitLocker with GParted
To use GParted to delete a drive using BitLocker, connect the USB flash drive with GParted to your device, and then use these steps:
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Start your computer with the GParted USB drive.
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Select the GParted Live (Default settings) option and press Enter.
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Select the “Don’t touch keymap” option and press Enter.
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Select your language and press Enter.
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Select 0 and press Enter.
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Use the drop-down menu in the top-right corner to select the drive to delete.
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Select the BitLocker encrypted partition and click the Delete button.
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Select the remaining partitions and click the Delete button again.
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Click the Apply button.
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Click the Apply button again to confirm and commit the changes.
- (Optional) Repeat steps 7 through 10 and delete the remaining partitions to wipe out the entire drive and make it ready for a new Windows installation.
After completing the steps, the Linux-based tool will wipe everything on the drive you selected, whether it’s encrypted or not.