
Bear in mind that you’ll need a USB stick big enough to hold the recovery drive’s files. When the Recovery Drive window appears, ensure the “Copy the recovery partition from the PC to the recovery drive” option is selected and go through the wizard. Click the Create a recovery drive option. To do this, press the Windows key to access the Start screen and type Recovery at the Start screen to search. You’ll need the USB flash drive if you ever want to refresh or reset your Surface. If you’d rather save this space, you can use a tool integrated into Windows to move the recovery partition onto a USB flash drive, freeing up space. The recovery partition, used when refreshing and resetting your PC, takes about 6 GB of space on your device. In fact, the cheapest model comes with 64 GB of storage space and around half of that will be used by Windows out of the box. The Surface Pro has limited hard disk space.

RELATED: How to Create and Use a Recovery Drive or System Repair Disc in Windows 8 or 10

These aren’t actually printed on the keyboard itself, so you’ll need to know they exist before you can use them. To make up for this, Microsoft has added a variety of Surface-specific keyboard shortcut combinations you can use.


These keyboards don’t have every single key you’ll find on larger keyboards. If you have a Surface, you probably have a Type Cover or Touch Cover keyboard for it.
