A Guide to Changing the Name of a User’s Home Folder in Windows 11

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This post instructs on how to rename a user’s home profile folder to match the new username in Windows 11. After renaming the user account, one must log in with a different administrator account and perform changes in the Windows Registry Editor and Command Prompt. Also, OneDrive should point to the new user home folder.

This post shows students and new users how to rename a user’s home profile folder to match the new username of an account in Windows 11.

In Windows, when you create a new user, a home folder in the C:\Users directory is created to match the user account’s name. This has always been the case.

If you rename a user account to something different and unique, the user home directory will not be renamed to match the account’s new username. So, you will end up with a different name for the account and home folder in Windows.

There can be different reasons why someone may need to rename a user’s home folder in Windows 11. One of the most common reasons is when a user account has been renamed, but the home folder still carries the old username.

This can confuse and make it harder to manage files and folders. Renaming the home folder to match the new username can help keep things organized and consistent.

Additionally, if you’re sharing files or folders with others, renaming the home folder to match the account name can make it easier for others to identify the correct user.

How to rename a user account in Windows 11

If you haven’t renamed a user account in Windows, the post below should help you do that. Renaming Windows accounts requires a few simple clicks.

Click on the link below to learn how to rename a user account in Windows.

How to Change Username in Windows 11

The above post shows you how to change or rename a user account in Windows 11.

How to rename the user’s home folder to match the username

Now that you’ve learned how to rename an account in Windows, continue below and learn how to rename a user’s home folder to match the account’s new name.

Before going forward, one thing you’ll need to understand. You can not log in with the account you want to rename. You have to log in with a different administrator account before you can rename the user’s home folder.

Sometimes, you’ll create a new account, make it an administrator, log in as that new account, and rename the targeted user home folder.

Or you can enable a Windows built-in administrator account, log in as the administrator account, and then change the account home folder you’re working with.

If you want to learn how to enable the built-in administrator account, click on the link below:

How to Enable the Administrator in Windows 11 – Website for Students

After you have logged in as the administrator, go to Start and search for Command Prompt, then select the Command Prompt app to open.

When the Command prompt app opens, type the commands below to list all the account SIDs on the machine.

wmic useraccount get name,SID

This will output similar lines with all the account SIDs on the system.

Output:
Name                SID
DefaultAccount      S-1-5-21-2007855691-582224021-1368697043-503
defaultuser0        S-1-5-21-2007855691-582224021-1368697043-1000
LocalAdmin          S-1-5-21-2007855691-582224021-1368697043-500
JaneDoe             S-1-5-21-2007855691-582224021-1368697043-504
Richard             S-1-5-21-3044698505-590223214-3122486089-1001

The account you want to rename will also be listed above. For this post, the targeted account to rename its home folder is Richard with SID S-1-5-21-2007855691-582224021-1368697043-501

Afterward, go to Start and search for Registry Editor, then select Open.

When the Registry Editor opens, navigate to the folder path below:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\ProfileList

Locate the SID for Richard and open it.

Now right-click on ProfileImagePath for the correct SID and modify the data to point to the new user account’s new home folder.

Click OK to apply your changes.

Next, go to File Explorer on the Taskbar and browse the C:\User folder. Then, select the account folder you want to rename.

Finally, type in the new folder name to match the user account name.

Exit File Explorer, and you’re done.

Also, make sure that if you’re using OneDrive, it’s also pointing to the new user home folder. That should do it, and you log out or reboot the computer.

Login and deactivate the administrator account, and you’re all set!

Conclusion:

This post showed you how to rename a user’s home folder to match the new name. If you find any error above, please use the comment form below to report.

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19 responses to “A Guide to Changing the Name of a User’s Home Folder in Windows 11”

  1. Seema Avatar
    Seema

    Unable to open the folders on This PC. Getting an error saying that the location is not available. How should I proceed?

  2. Chris Avatar
    Chris

    Won’t allow the folder name change, says it’s in use.

    1. Joe Avatar
      Joe

      Hi Chris,

      you need to use an different account than this one which you want to rename. Use netplwiz.exe to create a new user with admin rights, log off the account you want to change and use the created one instead. The folder of the account you logged in with is always in use and cannot be edited

    2. Davide Avatar
      Davide

      Devi riavviare il pc e eseguire il login come amministratore e riprovare. A me ha funzionato. Poi se usi oneDrive una volta fatto il login come utente apri l’app onedrive e imposta la nuova path utente.

  3. ab Avatar
    ab

    For some reason in Windows 11, following this, while it works there are two problems.

    One drive brings an error in each login that it cannot find the old folder.
    I cannot pin anything to taskbar

  4. smw Avatar
    smw

    Tried it in Windows 11, but search in settings is no longer working, cannot search anything in windows settings

    1. Frustro Avatar
      Frustro

      That is totally correct, yet all these posts fail to mention that and now you are stuck!! A lot of these so called guru-charlatan just copy from one site some info, yet don’t have clue or never test this themselves.

  5. Joshua Avatar
    Joshua

    Thank you very much. It works.

  6. Joseph Reda Avatar
    Joseph Reda

    As soon as I did this in same order my windows icon did not work. I tried to go back and lost windows .. I tried to restore and nothing is working.. even I created another admin user before I started this and its not working either .. this is crazy !!

  7. angry Avatar
    angry

    don’t do this on windows 11 if you’re logged in with a Microsoft account!!

    1. agree Avatar
      agree

      I second that! These instructions will likely make some of your programs not work.

  8. No One Avatar
    No One

    did not do the make a new account and i did it all in the account i want the folder to rename and now its stuck at preparing windows

  9. Xavier Avatar
    Xavier

    Thanks for a great and straightforward set of instructions. That Microsoft would make it so hard to make such a simple change is mind-boggling. I guess there must be some security reason, but obfuscation has never been a useful security strategy!

  10. Rasmus Avatar
    Rasmus

    This broke my windows – cannot open start menu and the windows 11 context menu broke.
    Don’t know if its related to the account being a Microsoft account – but no other way to restore but to reinstall windows.

    Honestly, don’t fucking do this.

    1. Tanish Avatar
      Tanish

      You went into safe made, so you can undo the steps to rename back to the original name it was and you will be back to the same condition.

  11. Puch Avatar
    Puch

    This worked for me, but later on none of the already installed apps can be updated/uninstalled as it looks at the path with the old name and errors out.

  12. Baskar B Avatar
    Baskar B

    Not working. Rename option not enabled.

  13. Ben Avatar
    Ben

    I keep getting the error: Cannot edit ProfileImagePath: Error writing the value’s new contents.

    I’m logged out of my main account, logged into a local account I created. I opened command prompt with administrator access. Not really sure what I’m doing wrong here.

  14. Paul Avatar
    Paul

    This article caused more damage than the problem I was trying to solve.

    Maybe it works for some people, but if like me, your PC was preinstalled with Windows 11, then chances are your desktop and environment are actually romaing, and pointing to OneDrive directories.

    So after going through all the steps.. creating an admin user in order to rename original user, logging back in as original user, and then opening explorer it complained that the Desktop folder didnt exist, every single time I opened it.

    Luckily you can fix this. Open regedit, and navigate to..

    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders

    Now modify each value to replace each key where the value contains user1, and replace that bit with your new username

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