Troubleshooting Access Database Errors with Stellar Repair for Access
What it fixes
- Corrupt .accdb/.mdb files that won’t open
- Missing or unreadable tables, queries, forms, reports
- “Unrecognized database format,” “Could not find file,” and other Access errors
- Data-level corruption (broken relationships, NULLs where data existed)
Quick pre-checks (do these before repair)
- Backup: copy the DB file to another location.
- Compact & Repair: try Access’s built-in Compact and Repair (Database Tools → Compact and Repair Database).
- Check file size & disk: ensure file isn’t zero bytes and disk has free space.
- Permissions: confirm you have read/write access and file isn’t open by another process.
- Rename / move: copy the file to a local drive and remove special characters from the filename.
Using Stellar Repair for Access — step-by-step
- Install and launch Stellar Repair for Access.
- Click Select Database and choose the corrupted .accdb/.mdb file (or drag-and-drop).
- Click Scan (choose Quick Scan first; use Deep Scan if Quick fails).
- Review the scan results in the preview pane (tables, queries, forms).
- Select items to recover (tick specific tables/objects or choose all).
- Click Save Repaired File, choose a destination, and save as a new .accdb/.mdb.
- Open the repaired file in Access and verify data integrity and relationships.
When to use Deep Scan vs Quick Scan
- Quick Scan: faster; try first for minor corruption.
- Deep Scan: slower but more thorough; use if Quick Scan fails or large corruption suspected.
Common pitfalls and fixes
- Repaired file still corrupt: run Deep Scan; try saving to a different drive; export recovered objects to a new blank database.
- Missing relationships or macros: export recovered tables to a new DB and rebuild relationships/macros manually.
- Partial data recovery: check preview to select only intact records; combine recoveries from multiple attempts if needed.
Post-repair checklist
- Verify table counts and record totals against backups or expected values.
- Recreate indexes, relationships, and user-level security if lost.
- Run queries and open forms/reports to confirm functionality.
- Keep the repaired file as the working copy and maintain regular backups.
Alternatives & when to escalate
- If Stellar fails, try Microsoft’s Jet Compact/Repair utilities, or third-party specialists.
- For mission-critical or highly corrupted databases, consult a data-recovery service.
Best practices to avoid future corruption
- Regularly Compact & Repair and keep automated backups.
- Avoid abrupt shutdowns; ensure stable storage and antivirus exclusions for DBs.
- Split front-end/back-end for multi-user environments and use a reliable network.
If you want, I can provide a concise checklist you can print or a short email-ready summary for sharing.
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