QuickBooks change backup location
Sometimes things just don’t go well—files get messed up, computers crash. But don’t worry—it’s easy to get QuickBooks going again.
If you’ve upgraded to QuickBooks for Mac 2016 or later, you probably already know that we’ve changed the way we help you back up your all-important company file. If you’re new to QuickBooks, you probably just want to know how backups and restoring backups of your company file works.
Setting up backup for your company file
The first thing you’ve got to do is set up your backup preferences.
Here’s how:
- Launch QuickBooks for Mac 2015 (if you haven’t already).
- Go to QuickBooks > Preferences.
- Choose Backup.
Now you’ve got some options:
- Set QuickBooks to automatically back up the company file every few hours or once a day.
- Set QuickBooks to automatically back up every time you close your company file.
- Choose a place to put your backup files. If you have a secondary or backup hard drive available, it’s a good idea to set the backup location to that drive. If you use Apple’s Time Machine, you can choose a folder on the Time Machine drive for your QuickBooks backups.
- Choose whether or not QuickBooks overwrites the backup file each time it creates a new backup.
- Decide whether to encrypt your backup and create a password or not. It’s a good idea to set a password (which automatically encrypts your backup file) if you’re backing up to Time Machine or to a cloud solution like Dropbox or Skydrive. If you’re the only user on the computer and you’re backing up to a private secondary drive, you probably don’t need a password.Tip: Be sure you pick a password you can remember. Once it’s encrypted and passworded, your backed up data cannot be unencrypted without your password—not even by us at Intuit!
- Decide whether to back up your Attached Documents Library with your company file.Tip: If you use attachments, we think it’s a good idea to choose this option.
What QuickBooks does to create a backup
When QuickBooks backs up your company file, it creates a disk image—that is, a file with a .dmg extension. Unless you’re a computer geek, you probably won’t care about the details of this kind of file.