MiniTool Partition Wizard version 10.1 is a legacy release of the well-known MiniTool Partition Wizard disk management software. While newer versions like MiniTool Partition Wizard 13.6 are currently available, some users prefer version 10.1 for its specific UI layout and compatibility with older hardware. Top Features of Version 10.1
Convert MBR Disk to GPT Disk with MiniTool Partition Wizard.
MiniTool Partition Wizard 10.1 was released around 2015–2016. It was a popular disk partitioning tool for Windows (XP through 10). The Free Edition offered many core features that competitors like EaseUS or AOMEI also provided, but version 10.1 was considered stable, lightweight, and less bloated than later versions. minitool partition wizard old version 101 top
While MiniTool Partition Wizard is now on Version 12+, Version 10.1 (often referred to by users as "v10.1" or the "10 series") holds a special place in the utility software hall of fame. Released in the mid-2010s, it represents a sweet spot: powerful enough for modern (at the time) Windows 7/8/10 systems, yet free of the subscription models, telemetry, and feature bloat found in newer releases.
Why do people still seek v10.1 instead of the latest v12.7? Let's compare. MiniTool Partition Wizard version 10
| Feature | Old Version 10.1 | Modern Version 12.x | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | OS Support | Win XP, 7, 8, 10 (basic), 11 (limited) | Win 11 native, Win Server 2022 | | SSD Trim | Not supported | Fully supported | | Resize 4K Native | Buggy | Perfect | | Account Required | No | Yes (for Free version features) | | Install Size | ~35 MB | ~150 MB+ | | Pro Feature Paywall | Minimal (only dynamic disk & server) | Aggressive (migration, recovery locked) | | UI Speed | Instant | 1-2 second delay per click (telemetry) |
The Verdict: Use v10.1 for legacy hardware, offline machines, or simple MBR partition resizing. Use v12.x for NVMe drives, Windows 11, or enterprise environments. Overview MiniTool Partition Wizard 10
Before touching your system drive, create a bootable USB.
Now, even if Windows corrupts during repartitioning, you can boot from that USB and recover.
If you have Windows 10/11 Pro, enable "Windows Sandbox." Install the software there first to ensure no malware exists.