How Many Times Must You Overwrite a Hard Disk? - Blancco (2024)

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Aug 29, 2019 Blog Article

The safest and most cost-effective way to make data disappear without having to destroy a hard disk drive (HDD) is to simply overwrite it. But how many overwriting passes are sufficient? Or, as some put it, how many times do you write ones, zeroes, or other junk data to a hard drive before it is completely wiped? It may be fewer than you think.

How Many Times Must You Overwrite a Hard Disk? - Blancco (2)

Bernard Le GargeanBernard Le Gargean is the Product Manager of Blancco Drive Eraser, the Blancco solution to erase and diagnose laptops, desktops and servers. In this role, he understands customers’ needs and technology trends in order to translate them into product implementations. He defines the product roadmap, the features priority and steers their development. He’s a data erasure expert that can help customers to improve their processes, increase their yield and maintain their satisfaction.

Wiping Hard Disk Drives Completely: How Many Passes Do You Need?

Occasionally, customers have requested my advice regarding which data erasure standard that we recommend, or the optimal number of erasure rounds required to securely erase a hard disk drive (HDD). Well, how many passes it takes to overwrite a hard disk can be a complex question. It depends on several factors, particularly technology changes, research findings and recommended procedures. I will touch on many of these in this post.

First, let’s take alook at the target of all these concerns: the hard disk drive—also referred to as a “hard drive” or “hard disk”—and what it means to overwrite one.

Hard Drive Basics

The magnetic hard disk drive, introduced in 1956, didn’t gain prominence until the late 1980s. These days, HDDs are still widely used for non-volatile data storage, and areexpected to remain for some timedespite the rise of faster flash-based storage, including solid-state drives (SSDs).

HDDs retain data on magnetic platters, where it can be preserved even without electrical power for many years. Though hard drive technology is a huge asset in our data-centric world because of its large capacity, decreasing cost and physical size, it is a potential liability because it must be disposed of properly to minimize or eliminate the risk of unauthorized data access.

The safest and most cost-effective way to make data disappear without having to destroy a hard disk is to simply overwrite it. But how many overwriting passes are sufficient? Or, as some put it, how many times do you write ones, zeroes, or other junk data to a hard drive before it is completely wiped?

The Evolution of HDD Data Removal Procedures

The process of removing data from storage media has been examined by different government agencies and organizations several times during the past 20 years. Today, internal operating manuals based on NIST 800-88 Media Sanitization Guidelines (see ourblog on NIST) usually specify two kinds of procedures:

  • clearing(to prevent recovering data using software) and
  • purging(to prevent recovering data using laboratory techniques).

Clearprocedures generally involve overwriting the HDD.Purgeprocedures with higher security requirements can vary but usually involve overwriting techniques combined with the execution of internal HDD commands (firmware-based erasure). (NOTE: Degaussing (demagnetizing) or physical destruction of media renders the media unusable, but even then, can sometimes leave recoverable data behind).

The nature of the data (how confidential it is) as well as other considerations (whether the hard drive is leaving the organization or not, for example)determines which procedures your organization needs to follow.

Both clearing and purging techniques are satisfied by the datasanitizationprocess, which involves a complete removal of data, including verification and certification that erasure has been performed successfully.This software-based method securely overwrites data from any data storage device by writing zeros and ones onto all sectors of the device. By overwriting the data on the storage device, the data is rendered unrecoverable and achievesdata sanitization.

Early 1990s: U.S. Department of Defense Specifies the 3-Pass Method

As early as the mid-1990s, operating manuals were released for classified information handling and data sanitization, the main one being theU.S. Department of Defense (DoD) National Industrial Security Program Operating Manual(PDF). This document specified that rigid magnetic disks should be sanitized by writingsome “character, its complement, and then a random character”(i.e., three overwriting passes) and is known as the“DoD 5220.22-M”standard.

Mid to Late 1990s: Gutmann Advocates 35 Passes, Schneier Says 7

In 1996,Peter Gutmann published a paperthat upset the status quo by affirming that some laboratories were theoretically capable of retrieving data from overwritten hard disks by using sophisticated tools such as magnetic force microscopes. As a result, he proposed an overwriting method consisting of 35 passes!

No need to panic, however. This algorithm was meant to be used on older HDD technology from the 1980s and 1990s that usedMFM/RLL line coding techniques. Also, this was a combination of three different algorithms to overwrite different line encoding schemes, which partly explains the large number of passes.

The arrival of newer HDDs usingPRMLtechniques in the late 1990s made the hard drives using MFM/RLL techniques obsolete, along with Gutmann’s 35-pass method. About the same time, security expert Bruce Schneier published a book containing a method for data overwriting using seven passes: one pass using ones, the next pass using zeroes and passes three through seven using other static or random characters.

The Year 2000: Agencies Worldwide Weigh In, with Germany Advocating 7 Passes to Overwrite a Hard Disk

Curiously enough, early in 2000, several national agencies released operating manuals that recommended the use of more than three passes.

A good example is theVSITRmethod by the German information security agency,BSI, which applied seven overwriting passes. It soon became popular in Europe to use overwriting methods that consisted of four to seven passes.

Make sure log file erasure is being carried out in compliance with global regulations.

Get your free data sanitization trial.

2006 to Today: DoD Drops 3-Pass Requirement, Other Governments Tout 1 to 3 Passes

NIST 800-88: The Current U.S. Government Standard States 1 Pass is Sufficient

Later in 2006, the DoD 5220.22-M operating manual removed text mentioning any recommended overwriting method. Instead, it delegated that decision to government oversight agencies (CSAs, or Cognizant Security Agencies), allowing those agencies to determine best practices for data sanitization in most cases.

Meanwhile, theU.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST),in itsGuidelines for Media Sanitization of 2006 (PDF), stated that “for ATA disk drives manufactured after 2001 (over 15 GB) clearing by overwriting the mediaonceis adequate to protect the media.” When NIST revised its guidelines in late 2014, it reaffirmed that stance.NIST 800-88, Rev. 1 (PDF)states, “For storage devices containingmagneticmedia, a single overwrite pass with a fixed pattern such as binary zeros typically hinders recovery of data even if state of the art laboratory techniques are applied to attempt to retrieve the data.” (It noted, however, that hidden areas of the drive should also be addressed.)

For ATA hard disk drives and SCSI hard disk drives specifically, NIST states, “The Clear pattern should be at least a single write pass with a fixed data value, such as all zeros. Multiple write passes or more complex values may optionally be used.”

Even for Purge, one pass will suffice, it said, though an inverted three-pass method is also an option.

HMG British Standard Advocates 1 to 3 Passes to Overwrite HDDs; BSI GSE Says 1 or 2 Passes Are Adequate

TheHMG Infosec Standard 5, published by theBritish CESG(now part ofNational Cyber Security Centre), currently defines two methods: one with one overwriting pass and one with three overwriting passes. The latter three-pass method, the CESG CPA-Higher Level, is almost identical to the 1996 “DoD 5220.22-M” standard, except that it requires verification after each step.

Finally, in 2012, the newer BSI GS standards were made public, combining one to two overwriting passes of random data with firmware-based erasure.

However, keep in mind that the overwriting techniques we’ve discussed thus far were intended for magnetic hard disk drives, not flash-based SSDs.

A Note on SSDs—and the Challenge of Erasing Them

With the rise of laptops and the need for speed, non-volatile storage trends have seen an uptick in solid-state drives (also known as flash memory drives or SSDs). And though the technology has been around for decades, it wasn’t until 2005 that Samsung declared SSD as a strategic market.

Today, SSDs come in different interfaces/technologies (SATA, SCSI/SAS, eMMC, Fusion-io, NVMe/PCIe, USB) and form-factors (2.5-inch, mSATA, M.2, AiC PCIe). Faster, more reliable, and allowing for more storage capacity than their HDD counterparts, SSDs are highly efficient. They are also smaller, lighter, more resistant to damage and consume less power.

However,they also come with data destruction concerns: SSDs are difficult to physically destroy to an acceptable level, and methods like degaussing don’t work on them. While NIST allows minimum one-pass overwriting for SSDs, it’s almost always combined with specialized commands, technologies, or tools and with additional steps required to reach all sectors. This is because SSDs have mechanisms that minimize wear (wear leveling) by using non-addressable overprovisioning areas within the drive where data can be left behind. Furthermore, multiple passes also come at a cost: premature wear on SSDs that reduces the overall lifetime of the media.

Fortunately, Blancco not only erases magnetic-based media, we also offer apatented SSD erasure methodtofully and securely overwritedifferent types of SSDs, simplifying the process and speeding up erasure across a range of flash-based storage devices.

Conclusion: Only 1 Overwriting Pass is Needed to Erase HDDs

The technology changes in the last 15 years,such as the ever-increasing data density on disk platters, have made all attempts to recover data after overwriting unlikely. Multiple overwriting passes for hard disk drives is not an absolute necessity anymore.

So, how many times should you overwrite a hard disk for complete data erasure?The answer: One pass is enough.

However, to ensure the overwriting process has been effective, major agencies and government bodies worldwide (NIST 800-88, NCSC, BSI and others) state that the verification of data erasure is mandatory for full compliance with their standards.Other researchsupports this idea.

To summarize, securely overwriting hard disk drives involves:

  • One overwriting pass for most HDD erasure. Remember to weigh data sensitivity against the costs of higher level of security and the time you want to spend on each processed asset. More passes take longer and are usually unnecessary.
  • Utilizing the drive’s firmware-based erasure commands, when available, as a valuable addition, particularly when erasing sensitive data.
  • Removing and erasing any hidden areas on the HDDas part of the erasure process in those cases.
  • Verifying erasure, whether at the end of the process or after each overwriting round to ensure that data sanitization has occurred and to comply with most data erasure standards.
  • Remembering that what works for HDDs does not apply to flash-based storage (SSDs): match your erasure method to your media type.

Documenting erasure: The best erasure is the one you can prove; therefore, a report proving verification and certification of the erasure of a media support isalso necessary.

In the end, the final decision on which erasure standard to use, and therefore, the number of times to overwrite your drives, rests with you. You can viewa list of data wiping and erasure standards, as well as the number of passes used in each, on our website, then decide which one(s) is the best fit for your business.

Overwrite Your Hard Disk Drives with Our Free Data Erasure Trial

As the global leader in certified data erasure, Blancco supports 24+ international erasure standards set by government agencies, legal authorities, and independent testing laboratories. OurBlancco Drive Erasersoftware has been designed to support all kinds of HDDs and SSDs in bothPCs and laptopsandservers. It provides advanced security features and reporting capabilities to fulfill (and exceed) your data sanitization policies.

We invite you toget your FREE Blancco Drive Eraser trialfor enterprise organizations today.Choose from 25+ erasure standards—from one pass to as many as your organization requires—and be confident that Blancco solutions erase data completely and permanently from all your HDDs and SSDs.

This post was originally published in 2014. It has been updated to reflect changes in technology and standards, as well as for accuracy and comprehensiveness.

How Many Times Must You Overwrite a Hard Disk? - Blancco (2024)

FAQs

How Many Times Must You Overwrite a Hard Disk? - Blancco? ›

One overwriting pass for most HDD erasure.

How many times should I overwrite my hard drive? ›

Multiple overwriting passes for hard disk drives is not an absolute necessity anymore. So, how many times should you overwrite a hard disk for complete data erasure? The answer: One pass is enough.

How many times can I rewrite a hard drive? ›

You can format a HDD as many times as you want until it fails. You can format a SSD until you exceed the maximum writes on the device.

How many times can you wipe a hard drive? ›

The number of write cycles for a HDD is infinite for the platters (the actual magnetic discs). The read/write process is done by magnetic head 'floating' a hair's breadth above the platter surface. Nothing, in a properly functioning HDD, ever touches the platters, so there is no wear.

How many times can you clone a hard drive? ›

There is no specific limit to the number of times you can clone a hard drive. Cloning a hard drive simply involves creating an exact copy of its contents on another drive, so as long as you have a functional source drive and a destination drive with sufficient capacity, you can clone it as many times as you need.

How often do you need to replace your hard drive? ›

Signs Your Computer Hard Drive is Failing, and if You Need a Replacement (And What to Do) One of the most problematic issues you can face with your computer is your hard drive crashing. In general, a hard drive is estimated to last for about five to ten years.

How do I overwrite my hard drive? ›

How to wipe a hard drive – Windows 10
  1. Press the Windows key.
  2. Type “Settings” to find the Settings app.
  3. Open Settings.
  4. Click Update & Security.
  5. Click Recovery.
  6. Click Get Started.
  7. Use the Remove everything option.
  8. Chose Local reinstall.

How many times can you rewrite a disk? ›

Typically, a CD or DVD can be rewritten between 1,000 and 100,000 times, although some discs may be able to withstand even more rewriting. However, as the disc gets older, the quality of the disc will degrade and the number of rewritable times will decrease.

Is simple overwrite enough? ›

NIST clearly states that one write pass is sufficient to erase data from drives beyond recovery. In recent years with innovations around the hard drive technology, such as the high data density on disk platters, makes data recovery impossible after a single overwriting pass followed by verification of the overwrite.

How many times can I rewrite my SSD? ›

The number of write cycles, or endurance, varies based on the type of NAND flash memory cell. An SSD that stores a single data bit per cell, known as a single-level cell NAND flash, can typically support up to 100,000 write cycles.

How many times should I wipe my PC? ›

We suggest you clean your computer every three to six months to keep your system looking its best and to prevent a significant reduction in your PC's lifespan.

Is wiping a hard drive enough? ›

Yes, you can completely wipe a hard drive, but you'll need to do more than simply delete the files stored on it. Deleting files from a hard drive doesn't actually remove them — it just reassigns that space so new files can be added later on. To clean a drive completely, you need to actually erase the data.

Will formatting my hard drive erase everything? ›

When you choose to format a hard drive, you are essentially only removing the pointers to the data as the partition table is either cleared or rebuilt. These pointers are necessary for your computer's operating system to be able to read and understand the data so that you can properly access your files.

How many times can you rewrite an HDD? ›

There is no specific number for rewriting a hard drive. One can rewrite data on an external hard drive many times as many he wants. If you do it 7 times, it's likely obliterated.

Is macrium good for cloning? ›

Advanced features such as intelligent sector copy and delta cloning make Macrium Reflect the fastest cloning tool available. Both live and offline systems can be safely and coherently cloned, via portable media or a bootable environment.

Is it better to clone or backup a hard drive? ›

Cloning is the ultimate way to preserve everything you have on a device. Unlike backups, which are file based, clones cover all your bases – they copy your operating system, your preferences and all your files and folders.

Is 7 pass erase secure enough? ›

The numbers 1, 3 and 7 refer to the number of passes made during the wiping process. It follows that choosing the 7-pass option will be the most effective way of erasing your drive. The United States Department of Defense recommends using a 7-pass wipe to clean media.

Can an overwritten hard drive be recovered? ›

File recovery FAQs

Yes—you can recover a previous version of an overwritten file using the File History feature in Windows, or the Time Machine tool in MacOS, if they have already been enabled on your device.

How often should I back up my hard drive? ›

Important data should be backed up at least once a week, but preferably once every twenty-four hours. These backups can be performed manually or automatically. A lot of automatic software options are available that you can set to make a backup of your data at a set time of the day or week.

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