AOMEI Backupper Standard — free, image-based backups for Windows
AOMEI Backupper Standard is a Windows backup and restore tool that covers both file-level and full-disk imaging. It’s the kind of software that works for quick, one-off jobs or as part of a regular backup plan for workstations and small servers.
It can back up entire drives, partitions, or selected files and folders. Destinations include local disks, NAS, network shares, and USB drives. The free edition supports scheduled full and incremental backups, plus cloning for disk migration.
The interface is clean and straightforward — useful if you’re setting it up for someone else to run without handholding.
Capabilities
Feature | Description |
Platform | Windows 7, 8, 10, 11; Server editions supported in paid versions |
Backup Modes | Disk image, partition image, system backup, file/folder backup |
Destinations | Local drives, USB, NAS, SMB shares |
Scheduling | Daily, weekly, monthly, or at event triggers |
Incremental Backups | Saves only changed data after a full backup |
Cloning | Disk and partition cloning for migration/upgrades |
Compression | Reduces image size at the cost of speed |
Encryption | AES encryption available in paid tiers only |
Deployment Notes
– Free version covers the basics; advanced options like differential backups or event-based triggers are in the paid editions.
– Image files use the proprietary .adi format — restores require AOMEI installed or boot media.
– Always test bootable recovery media before you need it.
– Incremental backups reduce storage needs but depend on the original full image — keep it safe.
– Network backups require write access to the target share.
Quick Start (Windows)
1. Download from https://www.ubackup.com
2. Install and run Backupper Standard.
3. Select backup type: system, disk, partition, or file/folder.
4. Choose a destination.
5. Set schedule if needed.
6. Run the backup and optionally create recovery media.
Where it fits
– Workstation system images for quick bare-metal recovery.
– Migrating a user from an old disk to a new SSD via cloning.
– Scheduled file/folder backups to a NAS in small offices.
– Pre-upgrade system backups before OS or software changes.
– Personal use on Windows PCs without licensing concerns.