What Is an AutoCAD BAK File and How to Recover It
Quick Answer
An AutoCAD BAK file is an automatic backup copy of a DWG drawing. Every time you manually save a drawing, AutoCAD can create a .BAK file containing the previous saved version of the drawing.
To recover it:
- Locate the .BAK file.
- Rename the extension from .BAK to .DWG.
- Open the file in AutoCAD.
- Run AUDIT to verify and repair the drawing database.
If AutoCAD crashed before the last manual save, check the Drawing Recovery Manager and SV$ AutoSave files, which may contain newer data than the BAK file.
What Is a BAK File in AutoCAD?
A BAK file is a backup copy of a drawing created during the save process.
Example:
SitePlan.dwg
SitePlan.bak
The DWG file is the current drawing.
The BAK file is the previous saved version.
This provides a local rollback point if:
- A drawing becomes corrupted
- Geometry is accidentally deleted
- Layers are modified incorrectly
- A save operation fails
- AutoCAD crashes
- A network interruption damages the active file
By default, the BAK file is stored in the same folder as the DWG file.
How AutoCAD Creates BAK Files
AutoCAD does not overwrite the existing DWG file directly.
The save process follows this sequence:
Current Drawing Session
│
▼
User Executes QSAVE
│
▼
Existing Drawing.dwg
│
▼
Renamed to Drawing.bak
│
▼
New Drawing.dwg Written
STEP 1 — The User Saves the Drawing
The process starts when the user executes:
QSAVE
or clicks Save.
AutoCAD then prepares to replace the existing DWG file.
Note: A SAVEAS operation behaves differently. When you save a drawing under a completely new filename, AutoCAD does not create a BAK file for the new drawing because no previous version exists yet. The original drawing retains its own BAK history.
STEP 2 — The Existing DWG Is Renamed
The previous version of the drawing:
Drawing.dwg
is renamed:
Drawing.bak
Any older BAK file is replaced.
STEP 3 — A New DWG Is Written
AutoCAD writes a brand-new DWG file containing the current database.
Result:
Drawing.dwg → Current Version
Drawing.bak → Previous Saved Version
A BAK file normally represents the last disk version of a drawing before the most recent save operation.
When a BAK File Can Save a Project
BAK files are often the fastest recovery method when:
- A drawing becomes corrupted after a save
- Someone accidentally saves unwanted changes
- Geometry disappears unexpectedly
- Layer standards are damaged
- Third-party add-ins corrupt the database
- A network write operation fails
In many situations, the BAK file opens successfully even when the current DWG does not.
How to Recover an AutoCAD BAK File
STEP 1 — Close AutoCAD
Close all AutoCAD sessions.
This releases any active:
DWL
DWL2
lock files.
STEP 2 — Show File Extensions
Windows hides known file extensions by default.
Windows 11
- Open File Explorer.
- Click View.
- Click Show.
- Enable File Name Extensions.
Windows 10
- Open File Explorer.
- Click View.
- Click Options.
- Open the View tab.
- Disable:
Hide extensions for known file types
- Click Apply.
STEP 3 — Locate the BAK File
Navigate to the folder containing the drawing.
Example:
SitePlan.dwg
SitePlan.bak
STEP 4 — Rename the File
Rename:
SitePlan.bak
to:
SitePlan_Recovered.dwg
Using a different filename prevents accidental overwriting of the production drawing.
Accept the Windows warning regarding file extensions.
STEP 5 — Open the Recovered Drawing
Open the newly renamed DWG file in AutoCAD.
If the drawing opens successfully, immediately save a new copy.
STEP 6 — Run AUDIT
After the drawing opens:
Type:
AUDIT
Press Enter.
When prompted:
Fix any errors detected?
Enter:
Y
AutoCAD will scan and repair database errors found within the drawing.
Using RECOVER to Repair a Damaged Drawing
The RECOVER command works differently from AUDIT.
Unlike AUDIT, RECOVER cannot be run on the drawing that is currently open.
Instead, AutoCAD must open the file through the RECOVER process itself.
STEP 1 — Close the Recovered Drawing
Close the drawing you previously opened.
STEP 2 — Open a Blank Drawing
Open AutoCAD and start a blank drawing.
STEP 3 — Run RECOVER
Type:
RECOVER
Press Enter.
STEP 4 — Select the Damaged Drawing
Browse to the recovered DWG file.
Select it.
AutoCAD will:
- Open the drawing
- Scan the database
- Repair recoverable errors
- Generate a recovery report
STEP 5 — Review the Results
After RECOVER finishes:
- Save the drawing
- Run AUDIT again if necessary
- Verify geometry, layers, blocks, and external references
For drawings containing Xrefs, use:
RECOVERALL
which checks both the host drawing and attached references.
Drawing Recovery Manager
If AutoCAD crashes unexpectedly, this should be your first recovery method.
Type:
DRAWINGRECOVERY
if the palette does not open automatically.
The Drawing Recovery Manager displays:
- DWG files
- BAK files
- SV$ files
associated with the crash session.
Because it automatically identifies the most recent recoverable version, it is usually faster than manually searching through temporary folders.
Recovering an AutoCAD SV$ AutoSave File
If the BAK file is too old, an AutoSave file may contain more recent changes.
What Is an SV$ File?
An SV$ file is an automatic snapshot created at scheduled intervals while you work.
Unlike BAK files, AutoSave files do not require a manual save operation.
STEP 1 — Locate the AutoSave Folder
Type:
OPTIONS
Open:
Files
Locate:
Automatic Save File Location
You can also check:
SAVEFILEPATH
to see the current AutoSave directory.
Tip: Press Win + R, type:
%tmp%
and press Enter.
This often opens the folder containing recent AutoSave files.
STEP 2 — Find the Most Recent SV$ File
Look for files ending with:
.sv$
Choose the most recent file based on timestamp.
STEP 3 — Copy the File
Copy the file to a safe location.
Do not work directly inside the temporary folder.
STEP 4 — Rename the File
Rename:
Drawing_1234.sv$
to:
Drawing_1234.dwg
STEP 5 — Open the Drawing
Open the file in AutoCAD.
Run:
AUDIT
after the drawing opens successfully.
What About AC$ Files?
In some crash situations, AutoCAD creates temporary command files using the:
.ac$
extension.
These files are not intended as standard recovery files, but large AC$ files created shortly before a crash may contain recoverable drawing information.
If no SV$ file exists:
- Locate recent AC$ files.
- Copy them to a safe folder.
- Rename the extension to DWG.
- Attempt to open the file using RECOVER.
Recovery success varies, but it is often worth trying when no other backup exists.
Understanding DWG, BAK, SV$, DWL, and DWL2 Files
| File Type | Purpose |
|---|---|
| DWG | Active production drawing |
| BAK | Previous saved version |
| SV$ | Automatic recovery snapshot |
| DWL | Drawing lock information |
| DWL2 | Additional lock metadata |
DWL and DWL2 Files
These files are created whenever a drawing is open.
They help prevent multiple users from editing the same file simultaneously.
Normally they disappear when AutoCAD closes.
If AutoCAD crashes, they may remain behind and can usually be deleted once you verify no user has the drawing open.
Control AutoSave Frequency
The AutoSave interval is controlled by:
SAVETIME
Example:
SAVETIME = 10
creates an AutoSave file every 10 minutes.
Many CAD managers use:
5
or
10
minutes in production environments.
Redirect BAK Files to Another Folder
Large projects can generate thousands of backup files.
The Express Tool:
MOVEBAK
allows you to redirect BAK files to a dedicated folder.
Example:
C:\AutoCAD_Backups
To restore the default behavior:
Run:
MOVEBAK
Then enter:
.
A single period returns BAK files to the drawing folder.
Why DWG Files Become Corrupted
Common causes include:
- Power failures
- Forced shutdowns
- AutoCAD crashes
- Defective SSD or HDD sectors
- Network interruptions
- VPN disconnects
- Faulty third-party add-ins
- Antivirus file locking
- Storage device failures
Cloud synchronization platforms can also create problems.
Examples include:
- OneDrive
- SharePoint
- Dropbox
- Google Drive
During a save operation, AutoCAD temporarily renames the existing DWG to BAK and writes a new DWG file. Some cloud synchronization agents attempt to access the file during this process, which can interrupt the save sequence or interfere with BAK creation.
For critical projects, work from a local drive and allow synchronization after the drawing session ends.
AutoCAD for Mac: Recovering a BAK File
AutoCAD for Mac also creates BAK files.
STEP 1 — Open Finder
Navigate to the drawing folder.
STEP 2 — Locate the BAK File
Find:
Drawing.bak
STEP 3 — Rename the File
Rename:
Drawing.bak
to:
Drawing_Recovered.dwg
STEP 4 — Open the Drawing
Open the file in AutoCAD for Mac.
STEP 5 — Run AUDIT
Type:
AUDIT
and repair any detected errors.
If the file remains unstable, close it and use:
RECOVER
from a blank drawing.
Best Practices
- Keep ISAVEBACK enabled.
- Set SAVETIME to 5–10 minutes.
- Save frequently.
- Maintain external backups.
- Run AUDIT periodically.
- Use RECOVER when opening damaged drawings.
- Save incremental versions of critical projects.
- Avoid unstable network connections.
- Work locally before syncing to cloud storage.
FAQ
Can AutoCAD Open a BAK File Directly?
No.
Rename the extension from:
.bak
to:
.dwg
before opening it.
Why Is No BAK File Being Created?
The most common reason is:
ISAVEBACK = 0
A BAK file also cannot exist until a drawing has been saved at least once.
What Is the Difference Between BAK and SV$ Files?
BAK files are created during manual saves.
SV$ files are created automatically according to the AutoSave interval.
Can I Delete BAK Files?
Yes.
Deleting a BAK file does not affect the active DWG.
You simply lose the previous saved version.
Why Is My BAK File Larger Than the DWG?
Database cleanup, compression differences, purging operations, and drawing repairs can create size differences between the two files.
This is normal.
Which Recovery Method Should I Try First?
Use this order:
- Open DRAWINGRECOVERY if AutoCAD crashed.
- Open the DWG directly.
- Run RECOVER.
- Rename and test the BAK file.
- Run AUDIT.
- Recover the latest SV$ file.
- Check recent AC$ files if no other recovery source exists.
