Before donating a laptop, you should take a few steps to protect your personal data and make the device ready for a new user. Here is what to do — and what you do not need to worry about if you are donating to Recycle4Charity.
Step 1 — Back up anything you want to keep
Copy important files to an external hard drive, USB stick or cloud storage (Google Drive, OneDrive, iCloud) before you do anything else. Once a device is wiped, recovery is not possible.
Step 2 — Sign out of all accounts
Sign out of every account that is linked to the device:
- Microsoft account or Apple ID (this de-authorises the device)
- Google, email and calendar accounts
- Cloud storage (Dropbox, OneDrive, iCloud)
- Banking, financial and shopping apps
- Social media and messaging apps
- Any software with a device licence (Adobe, Microsoft 365 etc.)
Step 3 — Perform a factory reset
Windows 10/11: Settings > System > Recovery > Reset this PC > Remove everything. Enable ‘Clean the drive’ for a more thorough overwrite.
macOS (Apple Silicon / T2 chip): System Settings > General > Transfer or Reset > Erase All Content and Settings. On older Macs: restart into Recovery Mode (Command + R) and use Disk Utility to erase the drive, then reinstall macOS.
Is a factory reset a secure data wipe?
No — a factory reset removes the file system index but does not overwrite the underlying data sectors. Data can be recovered from a factory-reset drive using forensic software. For most personal donors, a factory reset combined with signing out of all accounts is an adequate precaution — particularly because Recycle4Charity performs a certified data wipe on every donated device regardless. But if your laptop held particularly sensitive data (medical, financial, business), a professional wipe provides stronger assurance.
Donating to Recycle4Charity — you don’t need to wipe it yourself
When you donate a laptop to Recycle4Charity, we perform certified data destruction on every device before it is assessed for refurbishment. The same process used for business IT disposal — not a factory reset, but a certified overwrite or physical shredding of the drive. Your data is fully erased; the device goes to someone who needs it in London. Find out how to donate.