Best 5 Free Mac Data Recovery Software for External Drives ...Middle East

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Best 5 Free Mac Data Recovery Software for External Drives

You don’t really think about backups… until the moment you need one.

A few months ago, I accidentally wiped an external SSD that had a mix of documents and personal photos from a vacation ride. No warning, no recycle bin moment. Just gone. If you’ve ever deleted files from an external drive on a Mac, you already know, they often don’t go to Trash at all, especially when deleted directly from external drives.

    That’s where Mac data recovery software becomes your only real option.

    I spent time testing five of the most talked-about tools, not just surface-level installs, but actual recovery attempts on formatted drives, corrupted volumes, and accidental deletions. What you’ll find below isn’t marketing fluff. It’s what worked, what didn’t, and where each tool stands when you’re trying to recover deleted data from Mac, especially from external drives.

    1. Stellar Data Recovery Free for Mac

    My Experience

    Stellar Free Mac Data Recovery was the first tool I tested, and honestly, it set the bar pretty high.

    I connected a formatted exFAT external SSD and ran a scan. What stood out immediately was that like most tools, scanning is free, but here you can preview everything clearly before deciding to recover.. I could preview everything, photos, PDFs, even old project folders, before deciding whether to recover.

    That “try before you buy” approach is rare in this category.

    Key Features (What Actually Matters)

    Supports APFS, APFS Encrypted, HFS+, NTFS, exFAT, FAT16/32  Works with external HDDs, SSDs, USB drives, SD cards, LaCie drives  Fully compatible with Apple Silicon (M1 and newer) and T2 Macs  Deep scan using signature-based recovery  Pause & Resume scan (huge for large drives)  Preview before recovery (even in free version)  Recovers from: Deleted files  Formatted drives  Corrupted volumes  Can scan encrypted APFS drives if you can unlock them with the correct password

    Real Use Case

    I tested it on:

    A formatted SSD (exFAT) → recovered most of the original folder structure accurately An APFS encrypted drive → surprisingly strong results  A corrupted USB → partial recovery, but still usable 

    The folder reconstruction impressed me the most. Many tools dump files randomly, this one preserved hierarchy pretty well.

    Pricing

    Free: Up to 1GB recovery (no registration)  Standard: $69.99  Professional: $89.99  Premium: $99.99  Technician: $199 

    Pros

    Full scan engine unlocked in free version  Strong support for modern Mac file systems  Excellent preview system  Handles encrypted drives better than most 

    Cons

    1GB cap isn’t enough for large video files  Deep scan can be slow on large HDDs 

    What Makes It Different

    Most tools tease you, scan results are locked unless you pay. Here, you see everything first, then decide.

    That alone makes it the most transparent option for free Mac data recovery.

    Remember: On SSDs, recovery success depends heavily on TRIM. If TRIM has already cleared the deleted data, no software can recover it.

    2. Disk Drill

    My Experience

    After using Stellar, I wanted to see how Disk Drill stacked up. It’s one of the most popular tools, especially among Mac users.

    The interface is clean, modern, and beginner-friendly. You can start scanning in seconds.

    Key Features

    Supports APFS, HFS+, FAT32, NTFS  Recovery Vault & disk monitoring features  Deep scan + quick scan  File preview (limited in free version) 

    Real Use Case

    I tested Disk Drill on a USB drive where I deleted photos manually.

    Results:

    Quick scan found recent deletions fast  Like most deep scans, it recovered more files but lost folder structure

    That’s where it struggled with maintaining structure in deep scans.

    Pricing

    Free version: scan + preview only (no recovery on Mac)  Paid: starts around $89 

    Pros

    Excellent UI  Fast quick scans  Good for recently deleted files 

    Cons

    Free version doesn’t actually recover files  Folder structure recovery is weak  Deep scan results can feel messy 

    Verdict vs Stellar

    Disk Drill looks better visually, but when it comes to actually recover deleted photos from external drive on Mac for free, it falls short, because you can’t recover anything without paying.

    3. PhotoRec (with TestDisk)

    My Experience

    This one is… different.

    No polished UI. No fancy buttons. It’s command-line based. But under the hood, it’s powerful.

    If you’re even slightly technical, this tool can surprise you.

    It ignores the file system entirely, which is why it works even on damaged drives, but also why filenames and folders are lost, especially on APFS.

    Key Features

    Completely free and open-source  Works with almost every file system  Signature-based recovery  Supports hundreds of file types 

    Real Use Case

    I ran PhotoRec on a formatted SD card.

    Results:

    Recovered a huge number of files  BUT… filenames were gone  Folder structure? Completely missing 

    You end up sorting files manually.

    Pricing

    100% free 

    Pros

    Truly free recovery with no limits  Extremely powerful deep scan  Works even when other tools fail 

    Cons

    No GUI (not beginner-friendly)  No folder structure recovery  File names are lost 

    Verdict vs Stellar

    PhotoRec is like a raw engine, powerful but rough.

    If you’re comfortable digging through hundreds of unnamed files, it works. But for most users, Stellar is far more practical and organized.

    4. EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard Free for Mac

    My Experience

    EaseUS is heavily marketed, so I went in expecting solid performance.

    The interface is clean and guided, very beginner-friendly.

    Key Features

    Supports APFS, HFS+, FAT32, NTFS  Quick scan + deep scan  File preview available  Recovers photos, videos, documents 

    Real Use Case

    I tested it on a corrupted external HDD.

    Results:

    Found a decent number of files  Preview worked well  But recovery was limited heavily by free cap 

    Pricing

    Free: up to 2GB (with conditions)  Paid version: ~$89.95 

    Pros

    Easy to use  Decent recovery performance  Slightly higher free limit than Stellar 

    Cons

    Free recovery often requires sign-ups/social sharing  Scan results were decent, but not as well organized in my testing Slower on large drives 

    Verdict vs Stellar

    EaseUS gives you a bit more free recovery (2GB), but it comes with friction.

    Stellar feels more straightforward — scan, preview, recover — no hoops.

    5. Wondershare Recoverit Free

    My Experience

    Recoverit positions itself as a premium recovery tool with a polished experience.

    And yes — it looks great. But looks aren’t everything.

    Key Features

    Supports APFS, HFS+, FAT, NTFS  Deep scan + video recovery features  File preview available  Focus on media recovery 

    Real Use Case

    I tested it on a drive with deleted videos and images.

    Results:

    Video recovery was decent  Scan took longer than expected  Free recovery was very limited 

    Pricing

    Free: limited recovery (~100MB)  Paid: starts around $79.99 

    Pros

    Strong for media files  Good UI and guided workflow 

    Cons

    Very restrictive free version  Slower scans  Not great for document recovery 

    Verdict vs Stellar

    Recoverit is decent for videos, but its free tier is too restrictive.

    If your goal is Mac file recovery for free, this won’t get you far.

    Quick Comparison

    SoftwareFree Recovery LimitBest ForBiggest LimitationStellar Data Recovery1GBExternal drives + structured recoverySlow deep scanDisk Drill0GB (Mac)Scanning & previewNo free recoveryPhotoRecUnlimitedAdvanced usersNo file names/foldersEaseUS2GBBeginnersConditional limitsRecoverit~100MBMedia filesVery restrictive

    Why Recovery Sometimes Fails on Mac

    Current Macs behave very differently from older systems. If you’re using an SSD, TRIM can permanently erase deleted data on SSDs, sometimes within minutes or after the next idle cycle.

    APFS also handles storage differently, using containers and snapshots, which can make recovery harder in some cases.

    What this means is simple: recovery success depends more on timing and storage type than on the software itself.

    Final Verdict (What I’d Actually Recommend)

    Here’s the honest answer after testing all five.

    If you want something:

    Simple  Reliable  Actually free (not fake-free)  And capable of handling real-world scenarios like formatted drives or encrypted volumes 

    Then Stellar Data Recovery Free for Mac is one of the more transparent tools I tested

    It’s not perfect, the 1GB cap is real, but the fact that you can:

    Scan everything  Preview everything  And then decide 

    …makes it the most trustworthy tool in this list.

    If you’re technical and patient, PhotoRec is a powerful backup option.

    If you just want a pretty interface, Disk Drill and Recoverit look good, but they won’t help much without paying.

    One Tip That Matters More Than Any Software

    The moment you realize files are deleted:

    Stop using that external drive immediately.

    No copying. No editing. No saving new files.

    Because here’s the thing, recovery tools don’t magically “bring files back.” They recover data that hasn’t been overwritten yet.

    The more you use the drive, the lower your chances.

    Hence then, the article about best 5 free mac data recovery software for external drives was published today ( ) and is available on MacSources ( Middle East ) The editorial team at PressBee has edited and verified it, and it may have been modified, fully republished, or quoted. You can read and follow the updates of this news or article from its original source.

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