NovaBACKUP — backups for Windows machines that need to “just work”
NovaBACKUP is aimed at small offices and local servers where there’s no dedicated backup team, but the data still needs to be safe. It runs on Windows desktops and server editions, handles both file-level jobs and full system images, and can send them to local drives, NAS boxes, or supported clouds like AWS and Wasabi.
One of its strengths is that it doesn’t force you to choose between local and cloud — you can mix both. It has built-in scheduling, versioning, encryption, and the option for bare-metal recovery. The interface looks more like an admin utility than consumer software, which for many is a plus — fewer pop-ups, more direct control.
Capabilities
Feature | Description |
Windows Support | Windows 10/11, plus Server 2012 through 2022 |
Backup Scope | Files/folders, full system images, SQL/Exchange aware |
Destinations | Local storage, NAS, SMB shares, AWS, Wasabi |
Scheduling | Runs on a timer or at specific events |
Versioning | Keeps multiple copies for rollback |
Encryption | AES-256 before data leaves the machine |
Compression | Saves space, useful for large archives |
Disaster Recovery | Bootable restore from system image |
Deployment Notes
Licensing is per machine, so map out which PCs and servers are covered before you start. Cloud backups can be seeded locally if the first run is too big for your link. If you’re backing up SQL or Exchange, set up a test restore early — not the day you need it. Disaster recovery images are large; keep enough storage free for several versions. The logging is detailed, which makes compliance reporting easier.
Quick Start (Windows)
1. Install NovaBACKUP and activate your license.
2. Pick what you’re backing up — files, folders, or whole disks.
3. Choose destination (local drive, NAS, or cloud).
4. Set retention and schedule.
5. Run the first full backup.
6. Let incrementals or differentials handle the rest.
Where it’s a good fit
– Offices that want backups without managing a complex backup server.
– Mixed strategies — local copies plus cloud offsite.
– Small SQL/Exchange setups needing consistent backups.
– Compliance-driven workflows where encryption and reporting matter.
– Environments where recovery from bare-metal images is part of the plan.