How To Add Folders To Favorites In Windows 10?

0 Comments
[yasr_overall_rating] [yasr_visitor_votes]




This tutorial explains how to add folders to favorites in Windows 10. As the latest and probably the most important Windows OS release ever, Windows 10 includes a whole lot of features, tweaks, and general system improvements. One of them is the ability to add folders to favorites. Windows 10 allows you to add any folder to favorites. This can be considered as a kind of bookmarking feature (that almost every modern browser offers), with the only difference being that it is for folders. Adding folders to favorites lets you quickly access them from one convenient location, without having to navigate to them every single time. Sounds like something that can save you all those minutes you have to spend navigating nested directories, just to find what you want? Let’s see how you can add folders to favorites in Windows 10.

add folders to favorites in windows 10

How To Add Folders To Favorites In Windows 10?

Favoriting a folder in Windows 10 is extremely easy, and takes nothing more than a few clicks. Needless to say, you can add as many folders to favorites as you want. Here’s a step by step tutorial illustrating how it’s done:

Step 1: Open the Windows Explorer, and navigate to the folder that you want to add to favorites. It could be any regular or system folder (except for some protected system folders that aren’t user accessible by default). Let’s take the good ol’ Program Files as an example:

sample program files folder

Step 2: Once you’re in the folder, move up top to the Ribbon Menu. Note that the Ribbon Menu is collapsed by default, so you might have to use the drop down arrow on the top right corner to expand it (Alternatively, you can also use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+F1 to expand it).

ribbon menu expanded

Step 3: Once the Ribbon Menu has expanded, navigate to the Home tab, if it’s not selected already. As a last step, hit the big Five Pointed Star icon with the words Add to favorites beneath it. Check out the screenshot below:

add to favorites

Step 4: Voila! You’ve just added a folder to favorites in Windows 10. Once added to favorites, the folder will appear under the Favorites section in the left navigation pane of Windows Explorer. From here, you can easily access all your favorited folders. Easy-peasy!

access favorited folders

Also See: How To Access App Settings For Modern Apps In Windows 10?

Conclusion

Windows 10 is arguably the most feature loaded Windows OS release ever, having a bucket load of all kinds of features, big and small. The ability to add folders to favorites is a really useful feature, one that’ll surely save you a ton of time when navigating the labyrinth of directories and sub-directories. Do give it a try, you’ll love it!

[yasr_overall_rating]
[yasr_visitor_votes]
Works With: Windows 10
Free/Paid: Free

Leave A Reply

What do you think?
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
3 Comments
  • Latest
  • Oldest
  • Hottest
Keith2016-03-02

I agree with Ajax. I hate “Quick access”, and I want my Favorites back. Microsoft keeps fixing things that don’t need fixing and making them worse. (But overall, I do like Win 10.)

Ajax2015-10-11

This comment is dangerously incorrect.
The FAVORITES tree has been COMPLETELY REMOVED from Windows 10. It was replaced with a seriously dangerous and destructive alternative called Quick Access.
Unlike Favorites, the Quick Access tree shows direct low level folder links to the actual folders listed in it. They are NOT shortcuts. As a result, you cannot change the name of the link because you will actually be changing the name of the real folder that is linked.
It is NOT a shortcut, as in Win 7& 8. If you attempt to change the name of a Quick Access link, you will actually change the destination folder. Imagine adding a folder that some of your programs use as part of their configuration. E.g., if it were named, “My Super Important Files”, and you added it to Quick Access, then changing the name of the link to “HotFiles” would change the name of the actual folder.
This is horrific because but, even worse, if you DELETE a folder in the Quick Access tree, you will DELETE the actual folder the Quick Access link refers to. Imagine adding a Quick Access link to a critical legal or work project folder you have been working on for a year with 1,000’s of mission critical files and, later, decide you do not need the Quick Access entry so you DELETE it. You would literally delete your 1,000s of critical files.
Also, since you cannot change the names of the links without destroying your system, you cannot, e.g., have links to Document folders on 3 different machines. They would all appear as “Documents” making it impossible to determine which is which without clicking each one.
It is unbelievable, unconscionable, and utterly negligent for MS to have added such an incredibly DANGEROUS feature to replace one that worked beautifully, simply, and safely. What were they thinking? All those programmers, all the design research, all the QA and they allowed this travesty to occur?
Although Windows 10 is clearly better than ever in other regards, this one thing makes it a deadly platform in its initial release that could cause immeasurable losses to your data or even your operating system. Imagine linking the Windows or Programs folders then deleting the links. Goodbye to your system.
Until MS owns up to this incredibly negligent bug, I am advising people to AVOID upgrading. It is not worth the risk of losing everything. Yes, you can use Quick Access but only if you do not change or delete the inks. You can only “unpin” them. Tell that to your workers who spent years getting use to the platform.
Send your complaints to MS and tell them how stupid and dangerous Quick Access and to put back the simple Favorites tree that was there for the last 10 years. Oy!

EddieW2014-10-11

I use this in Win 8.1 so I’m glad it was kept. I hope it’s more reliable in Win 10, though…

Powered by Waline v3.5.5