Windows command guide

How to Launch System Restore with rstrui.exe

Sometimes the best fix is not another repair command but a controlled rollback to a point before the system broke.

This guide is written around the specific symptom-command match for launch system restore, not as a generic dump of terminal lines. That makes the page more useful for real troubleshooting and reduces the chance of running the wrong repair step.

Reviewed guide Updated 2026-04-21
Windows Recovery Environment Command Prompt
rstrui.exe

Best place to run it

Windows Recovery Environment Command Prompt is the right execution context for this page. Even when elevation is not always required, using the right shell prevents syntax mistakes and makes the output easier to trust.

Fast repair workflow

  1. Start from the exact symptom on this page: The problem began after a driver or update change
  2. Run the startup recovery line exactly as shown: rstrui.exe.
  3. This workflow is tuned for this repair, so avoid mixing it with unrelated repair commands too early.
  4. Re-check boot state with BCD or recovery info instead of repeating the same boot command blindly.
  5. If startup still fails, move to partition, file-system, or recovery-media diagnostics instead of stacking more write operations.

Recovery command sequence

Use this sequence when you want the page command in a cleaner, step-by-step recovery block.

:: Run these lines from Windows Recovery Environment when the guide calls for it @echo off echo Starting recovery command sequence... rstrui.exe echo. echo Review the output and restart only after the command sequence finishes. pause

Verification commands after the repair

These follow-up commands help you check whether the repair actually changed the Windows state that matters, instead of assuming success from a single line.

bcdedit /enum reagentc /info

What problem this command is trying to solve

This command launches the System Restore wizard so you can reverse recent system changes.

  • The problem began after a driver or update change.
  • You want to undo system-level changes without wiping personal files.
  • Manual commands feel too risky.

How the command works

rstrui.exe opens the System Restore interface so you can review restore points and start a rollback.

When it makes sense to run it

Use it when the system was working well not long ago and a recent change likely caused the instability.

Before you run this command

  • Open the shell that matches rstrui.exe before you paste it.
  • Confirm that the symptom really matches this guide, especially if you are seeing signs such as: the problem began after a driver or update change.
  • Write down the exact startup or recovery message before you change boot-related data.

What result to expect

After running rstrui.exe, compare the result against the symptom that brought you here. The most useful checkpoint is whether the problem began after a driver or update change becomes less frequent, changes form, or produces a clearer error message. A command page is stronger when it helps you verify a real change instead of just assuming the line must have worked.

How to verify that it worked

The best verification step after rstrui.exe is to repeat the action that previously triggered the problem. If you want to undo system-level changes without wiping personal files still appears in exactly the same way, the command probably was not the whole answer and you should move to the next targeted check instead of assuming the page is finished.

Shell and execution context

This command usually does not need a full elevated repair context, but it still works best when you run it in the shell it was written for and read the output carefully.

Before you run it

System Restore affects system files, drivers, and some installed software.

When this is probably the wrong fix

This is not the right first fix for a simple slow boot caused by startup apps alone. Use it when Windows cannot start properly, recovery keeps appearing, or boot data itself looks damaged.

What to do if it does not help

If rstrui.exe does not improve the problem began after a driver or update change, move to the next repair step that matches the same symptom family instead of piling on random commands. The best follow-up depends on whether the failure is mainly about startup, recovery, or boot configuration.

Frequently asked questions

Should I use rstrui.exe for this exact Windows symptom?

Use it when the behavior on your PC lines up with the repair target on this page: This command launches the System Restore wizard so you can reverse recent system changes.

What should I check right after rstrui.exe?

Check whether the original trigger still reproduces the same failure. For this page, a useful checkpoint is whether the problem began after a driver or update change becomes less frequent, changes form, or points you toward a more specific next step.

When should I not rely on rstrui.exe alone?

This is not the right first fix for a simple slow boot caused by startup apps alone. Use it when Windows cannot start properly, recovery keeps appearing, or boot data itself looks damaged.