- Local time
- 6:29 AM
- Posts
- 226
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro 25H2
What I want to do is to re-encrypt the system drive with a different key.
My setup: I have 2 internal SSD drives (NVME, SATA) in the computer, and another USB external drive, all encrypted with Bitlocker. They are all set to unlock automatically, with the external drive also having a password attached.
I understand that to re-encrypt the system drive with a different key, I have to disable Bitlocker and decrypt it first, and they re-enable Bitlocker and encrypt it again later. However, to disable the system drive, the Bitlocker manager insists that all other drives (SATA, USB external) have to be decrypted too. I don't really get it, since I have separate recovery keys for all those drives. Why do other drives have to be decrypted too if I have the recovery keys?
Is it possible to re-encrypt the system drive with a different key without decrypting all other drives if I have the recovery keys to all 3 drives?
My setup: I have 2 internal SSD drives (NVME, SATA) in the computer, and another USB external drive, all encrypted with Bitlocker. They are all set to unlock automatically, with the external drive also having a password attached.
I understand that to re-encrypt the system drive with a different key, I have to disable Bitlocker and decrypt it first, and they re-enable Bitlocker and encrypt it again later. However, to disable the system drive, the Bitlocker manager insists that all other drives (SATA, USB external) have to be decrypted too. I don't really get it, since I have separate recovery keys for all those drives. Why do other drives have to be decrypted too if I have the recovery keys?
Is it possible to re-encrypt the system drive with a different key without decrypting all other drives if I have the recovery keys to all 3 drives?
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro 25H2
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop




