Tip: Don't see your issue listed? Try Troubleshoot installing Office for additional issues and their possible solutions. Before you can install Microsoft or Office you need to associate it with a Microsoft account, or work or school account. If you have an Office for home product and bought Office at a retail store or online store, but don't have a Microsoft account, it's possible you haven't redeemed your product key yet if you got one , or you missed the step for linking your recent purchase with an account.
Do the following to link an account with Office. For an Office for home product, go to office. Your account is successfully associated with Office when you see the page, My Office Account followed by your Microsoft account email address, and a button to install Office. Select the PC or Mac tabs above to help you with the rest of the install process. If the Microsoft account or work or school account isn't working, see I forgot the username or password for the account I use with Office.
After signing in with your work or school account you don't see an option to install the desktop applications on the Microsoft home page, go directly to the Microsoft Software page instead. Select the language and bit-version you want PC users can choose between bit and bit , and then click Install. See Step 2 and 3 on the PC or Mac tabs above to help you with the rest of the install process.
If you still don't see an option to install Office on the Microsoft Software page, it's possible your admin hasn't assigned a license to you. Find out if you have a license to install Office. If you're a student or teacher and your institution didn't give you a license, find out if you're eligible to Get Microsoft for free. If you're trying to sign in with your work or school account to www. To install Office, try signing in directly to the Microsoft Software page instead.
See Steps 2 and 3 on the PC or Mac tabs above to help you with the rest of the install process. Not all versions of Office include a key, but if yours did, you need to redeem it before you can install Office.
Follow the remaining prompts to finish linking your Microsoft account with this version of Office. No product key or not sure if you need one? See Using product keys with Office. The steps in this topic assume you have Microsoft or Office and you're ready to install or reinstall it. Don't have the latest version yet? Learn more about the differences between Microsoft and non-subscription versions. Installation help for older versions of Office:. Office , Office , or Office Office for Mac Office For Microsoft subscriptions only: You can install Office on all your devices and be signed in to five at the same time.
To learn more, see How sign in works in Microsoft If you have Microsoft Family, you can also share your Microsoft Family subscription with up to five family members or other people. Each person can install Office on all their devices and be signed in to five at the same time. However, you may transfer Office to another computer that belongs to you if you experience a hardware failure or you buy a new computer.
For more information, see the Microsoft License Terms for your product, or see this blog post, Office now transferable. If you're not sure, see Check if you have local admin rights to install Office. If you bought a stand-alone version of an Office app, for example Visio or Word, in most cases you install this app in the same way you install the Office suite, by signing in to www.
The Office apps are available to install on your iPhone and iPad, Android device, or Windows phone and tablet. See Set up Office apps and email on a mobile device. If Office seems to be taking a very long time to install, this may be caused by problems with your internet connection, firewall, or anti-virus software.
For possible solutions, see Office is taking long to install. Office can also take long to install because of a slow internet connection such as a dial-up connection.
If you don't have a good connection, install Office using the Use the Office offline installer. Office won't install: Your computer must be running a supported operating system to install Office.
You can find a list of which systems are supported on the system requirements page. For example, your install won't be successful if you're trying to install Office on a computer running Windows Vista or Windows XP operating system.
If your computer can't install the full desktop version of Office, try the free Office Online apps using your desktop browser.
I received an error message: If you got an error message while trying to install Office and it has a Learn More link, select it to get information for how to troubleshoot that particular error.
If there wasn't a link, see Troubleshoot installing Office. I received an unsupported operating system message: If you got an unsupported operating system error message you may be trying to install Office on an unsupported device such as installing the Mac version of Office on a PC or vice versa, or trying to install Office on a Chromebook or other mobile device. See Unsupported operating system error when installing Office or Set up Office apps and email on a mobile device.
For information about how to download the desktop version of OneNote see OneNote is missing after installing Office or Microsoft You can also type what you're looking for using the search bar in the upper-right corner. If you're the Microsoft admin of an Office for business plan, users in your organization can only install Office using the steps in this topic as long as your plan includes the desktop version of Office, and you've assigned the user a license and given them permission to install Office Manage software download settings in Microsoft For information about how to assign licenses, see Assign licenses to users in Microsoft for business.
If you've run out of licenses and need to purchase more, see Buy licenses for your Microsoft for business subscription. If you weren't able to resolve your problem, try contacting Microsoft support. Watch out for ads on the sites that may advertise products frequently classified as a PUP Potentially Unwanted Products. Thoroughly research any product advertised on the sites before you decide to download and install it.
Andre for Directly Independent Advisor. I'm here to help you with your problem. I would not use the copy of Windows 10 you bought to reinstall Windows 10 on the computer you bought. The machine is already licensed and can be updated to newer versions of Windows 10 either through Windows Update or by downloading making a bootable copy. Option 2: When you upgraded from a previous version of Windows or receive a new computer preinstalled with Windows 10, what happened is the hardware your PC will get a digital entitlement, where a unique signature of the computer will be stored on Microsoft Activation Servers.
The Windows 7 or Windows 8 genuine license you were previously running will be exchanged for a diagnostics key. Anytime you need to reinstall Windows 10 on that machine, just proceed to reinstall Windows It will automatically reactivate. You will prompted to enter a product key a couple times through the installation, click I don't have a key and Do this later.
Go to a working computer, download, create a bootable copy, then perform a clean install. Once your computer is set to boot from the DVD, you should see this option. If you are installing from a retail Windows 10 USB thumb drive, you will be asked to select either 32 or 64 bit Windows The Windows logo will appear on screen, this might be here for a while, as long as you see the animating dots, everything should be ok. Select your Language, Time and Keyboard method then click Next. Click Install now Windows 10 setup will prompt you for a product key during installation a couple times.
If you have a Windows 10 product key, you can proceed to enter it. Setup will also prompt you to select the edition you have a license for - Home or Pro. Please make sure you choose the right edition. If you choose the wrong edition, your only option will be to perform a clean install again. The copy of Windows 10 you download and upgrade from will correspond with the edition of Windows you have installed, if it does not, this is why you might be experiencing problems activating: Windows 7 Starter, Home Basic, Home Premium, Windows 8.
You might get a driver missing error or something to that effect. If you do, restart setup, but this time, when you arrive at the following screen, disconnect your thumb drive then go through Custom options. When setup is ready copy files, it will prompt you to reconnect the installation source your USB.
Select the drive then click New NOTE: If you have multiple partitions listed, select each one starting at the bottom , then click delete until there is only a single one unallocated drive displayed in the window. Select the unallocated drive listed, click New, click Apply then OK This will split the drive into multiple partitions, select the Primary partition then click Next. NOTE: The System Reserved partition is where recovery files are kept for diagnostics and repairing damaged Windows 10 files; or even reinstall Windows Wait while Windows installs When this phase of setup is complete, Windows will automatically restart then reboot into setup again.
Windows is detecting and installing your hardware. After this is complete, Windows will restart one last time. The fix is for in case the drive is not recognized in my case i can clearly see the drive it just does not recognize the previous installation also there isn't an alternate option given there it just tells to format in case previous installation is not detected.
The only suggestion I have is that the XP boot manager or one of it's files is not visible or not correct in some manner. You need to find boot. Along with boot. So the first step would be to find those files, tell us where they are, and what their parameters are - all hidden, system, read-only. Also double-check that there is not more than one copy of each of those files somewhere else.
Assuming all is well there, please report exactly what is in boot. Because the OS will not boot, perhaps? Please give more detail on your problem. Click to expand I am dual booting but even before I dual booted the problem existed so dual boot is not the problem here. I understand this problem to some extent. This happens when some of those windows critical files have some issues: the system may still boot even if this happens but there will be quite some hitches in operation.
So in the case you try to repair and the previous installation does not appear, boot to cd again and enter the recovery console through the first repair option you get when running windows xp setup. Use these commands: fixmbr- this will fix the masterboot record file and : chkdsk -r. This will fix as much file and file system errors as possible and probably correct the problems with those critical windows files. If this does not work and this has happened several times on the same HDD, then it means your HDD's intergrity can't be guaranteed.
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