Stellar Repair for Access - recommended by MVPs and trusted by admins worldwide, to repair corrupt MS Access database & recover its objects in a new database.
Stellar Repair for Access - recommended by MVPs and trusted by admins worldwide, to repair corrupt MS Access database & recover its objects in a new database. Previews all the recoverable objects before saving them. The software supports Office 365, Access 2019, 2016, 2013, and lower versions up to Access 2002. - Repairs corrupt .ACCDB and .MDB files - Repairs split Access database - Repairs & Previews tables, deleted records, macros, modules, etc. The Microsoft Access repair software from StellarĀ® repairs corrupt MDB and ACCDB files of the Access database. The software can fix corruption errors caused due to hardware failure, software conflicts, and inconsistencies in the database design. Stellar Phoenix Access Database Repair software now known as Stellar Repair for Access helps repair all objects from the corrupted Access database files, including tables, queries, forms, macros, linked tables, indexes, modules, attachment data type, etc. It can also repair long number data type for Microsoft Access 2019.
Publisher
Stellar Information Technology Pvt Ltd.
Version
7.3.0.4
License
Proprietary
Architecture
x64
Installer Type
inno
Package ID
StellarDataRecovery.StellarRepairForAccess
// frequently asked questions
Open PowerShell or Command Prompt and run: winget install StellarDataRecovery.StellarRepairForAccess. Winget is built into Windows 10 (1809+) and Windows 11.
Stellar Repair for Access - recommended by MVPs and trusted by admins worldwide, to repair corrupt MS Access database & recover its objects in a new database.
Stellar Repair for Access is available under the Proprietary license. Use winget or the direct download link on this page.
Run winget upgrade StellarDataRecovery.StellarRepairForAccess in PowerShell or Windows Terminal to update Stellar Repair for Access to the latest version.
Run winget uninstall StellarDataRecovery.StellarRepairForAccess in an elevated PowerShell window, or go to Settings > Apps > Installed Apps.