I have absolutely no experience with Linux, and I desperately need to get my computer back up and running again with Windows.
How do I remove Ubuntu and reinstall Windows?
Editor's note: many of the answers are about removing Ubuntu from dual-boot but keeping Windows (which is a bit complicated), while other answers are about removing Ubuntu from single-boot (which is easy: basically just format the disk while installing Windows). The question as written is ambiguous between dual-boot or single-boot.
If you have a single-boot system with only Ubuntu installed, you can install Windows directly and override Ubuntu completely. To remove Ubuntu from a Ubuntu/Windows dual boot system, you will first need to replace the GRUB bootloader with the Windows bootloader. Then, you would need to remove the Ubuntu partitions.
The first step can be done with a Windows Recovery DVD/Installation DVD or a Ubuntu Live DVD. If you have a newer Dell laptop (such as the Dell Inspiron), you would need to do so by changing the boot sequence in the UEFI settings, which will be discussed later.
Using Windows Recovery or Installation Media
If you don't have a Windows recovery or installation media, you can download official ISO files for Windows 10, Windows 8, or Windows 7 from the Microsoft Download Center and burn them on a DVD or a USB drive. Windows will only install as an evaluation copy for 30 days without a genuine product key.
Grab a Windows recovery or installation media and boot from it. You should see this or a similar screen on a recovery media.
You should see this on an installation media. Click "Repair your computer" and you should see a screen like the first image.
Open the Command Prompt, then type
bootrec /fixmbr
into the Command Prompt.Reboot and boot into Windows. Then follow the steps below to remove the Ubuntu partitions.
Using a Ubuntu Live DVD and Boot Repair
If you don't have a Windows recovery CD or you are constrained to download and burn the ISO files mentioned before, you can use Boot-repair. It is a tool that fixes most boot problems(Windows or Ubuntu). I suggest using a Windows CD if possible.
Boot from a Ubuntu Live DVD or USB
Type these lines in the terminal one line at a time.
Search for Boot-Repair in the Dash and launch it.
To fix your computer with Boot-repair, simply click the "Recommended Repair" button. Then follow the steps below to remove the Ubuntu Partitions.
Changing the Boot Sequence in the UEFI settings of a Dell computer
Newer Dell laptops like the Dell Inspiron requires the bootloader order to be changed directly in the UEFI settings. This can be done with the following steps.
General
→Boot Sequence
. Under the Boot Sequence section, selectUbuntu
, then clickDelete Boot Option
.Deleting Ubuntu Partitions
After the previous steps, your computer should boot directly into Windows.
Go to Start, right click Computer, then select Manage. Then select Disk Management from the sidebar.
Right-click your Ubuntu partitions and select "Delete". Check before you delete!
Then, right-click the partition that is on the Left of the free space. Select "Extend Volume". Go through the Wizard and Finish it.
Done!
Note from Tanner: If you are using an extended partition, you might have to remove the big extended partition to make the space unallocated.
Start the software and select what operating system you want to uninstall.
First download bootsect.exe into the Download directory.
press the
windows
key, typecmd.exe
and on the result (The command prompt) start it as an "Administrator" by right clicking on the cmd icon, and selectRun as Administrator
.In the new cmd.exe window, cd to your download directory. for example
cd C:\Users\Lalu Patel\Downloads
. _assuming your user name is "Lalu Patel".Then enter this command.
bootsect.exe /nt60 ALL /force /mbr
. Restart your system to see that, Windows is automatically loading without grub.Then in Windows
Administrative Tools
, then close the Administrative Tools window.Disk Management
. see this.unknown
type. it is the Ubuntu partition. Right Click -> Delete partition.unallocated space
.Extend Volume
.Type in how many MB (1 GB = 1024 MB) you want to use from the unallocated space to extend the selected partition (step 5) into, then click on the Next button.see this.
Note: If you want to use all of the unallocated space to extend into, then type in the maximum available space shown for the unallocated space.
Click on the Finish button. You're done.
Source: bootsect, disk management
If you don't have a Windows CD and deleted the Ubuntu partition
Scenario:
Once Ubuntu loads, open a Terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T), and run these commands:
Note: you may have to replace
/dev/sda
with the main hard drive you installed Ubuntu and Windows to.Actually the solution to this is very easy, anyone can do it. First things first. Download something called EasyBCD (there's a free version, you have to download it into Windows as it's a .exe) http://neosmart.net/download.php?id=1 run through the set-up.
Launch EasyBCD and go to the sixth button down, EasyBCD deployment. Since you're a Windows XP user, select Write the Windows XP Bootloader to the MBR then press the big red button called "Write to MBR"
Next head up to the second button called "Edit boot Menu" and select the first option "Skip the boot menu" and click save settings. Congrats, you now have Windows XP bootloader back, and it will automatically boot into Windows, but we aren't done yet. You still have Ubuntu on your system, we want to change that.
Open up disk management and find your Ubuntu partition and the Ubuntu Swap Partition (I assume you know how big it is, [the swap is about two gigs, should be right next to the Linux partition]). Delete the swap first, and then delete the Ubuntu partition. If done properly you will get Unaccounted space for HD and the swap will become "Free Space" time to also fix that.
Next right click on the Free-Space partition (swap space) and delete it again, it should become part of the unaccounted space. Now you don't want to just leave all that empty space on your HD. Right click on your Windows partition now, and click extend the volume. It should default into the maximum size of your HD, (which you want so XP has all the space.) and click continue. There you go, it'll do it's thing and Windows XP should now have your entire HD, Ubuntu will be gone, and you Will have the XP bootloader back. Hope that helped for you!
(Video tutorial from Tech-Harvest doing basically the same thing but on Windows 7 - http://youtu.be/AAWBZq04Izc )
The way to "delete" Ubuntu is to delete the partition it's using. That will make the partition available for reformatting and use in another OS.
If you can still run Windows, use its disk manager to delete the Ubuntu partition. You could then format it to use in Windows, or expand an existing partition.
You can also boot the Ubuntu LiveCD and choose the "Try Ubuntu" option. After it loads, find and run gparted and remove the partition.
If Windows and Ubuntu are both gone and you want to reinstall Windows, you can repartition and reformat during the installation.
If you're into paid software I highly recommend Acronis. Paragon is also good. It has a lot of interesting options. It allows you to do everything you need to in order to do this. The order of operations is:
Alternately, you could use supergrubdisk. Directions on their wiki include screenshots and step by step directions.
You need to restore the MBR that was overwritten by grub when you installed ubuntu. In the old days, you ran fdisk /MBR on your system disk. The way to do it in Windows XP is to run the "Windows Recovery Console" which can be run from the installation disk or installed to the hard drive and run from there.
The instructions for installing the Recovery Console are here: http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=314058
However, since you don't have the CD you'll need to try installing it from what you have already. Open up the run dialogue (win+r, or start->run) and enter this:
Then you will have to reboot into windows and select the recovery console while it's booting. From there you will need to run FIXMBR which is documented here: http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/bootcons_fixmbr.mspx
Once this is done successfully, your computer will boot straight into windows again.
If you can boot Ubuntu the Live CD, choose "Try Ubuntu" option. Then try installing it again by choosing manual partitioning, It is the last option in the 'Prepare your disk' step. Reinstall it in the same partition you tried before.
First delete the old Ubuntu partition, (you can recognize the old Ubuntu partition by looking at the partition type column, it should have the type as
ext4
orext3
)Then create a new partition by clicking 'Add' button. In the new dialog change the "Do not use the partition" with
ext4
, place a 'tick' mark at 'format' check box, and in the bottom select list, select/
, then click OK.Check that, you choose the bootloader install device as
/dev/sda
(if you are installing on the local hard disk). Then proceed.See if any error message appears. If it completes successfully, it should give you a message with two options - "Keep trying Live CD" and "Restart your Computer to use newly installed system". Restart your laptop.
I think it should work.
From Windows 7, install easyBCD.exe (you can find it at www.softpedia.com)
Run it, and select RepairMBR
Then delete some partitions made by Ubuntu's system.