Download Link: https://dl.google.com/drive-file-stream/GoogleDriveSetup.exe
You’re not alone—this is a known quirk with Google Drive for Desktop and Windows Quick Access (Quick Launch) in File Explorer. When you pin Google Drive to Quick Access, it may not persist after a reboot. This is often due to how Google Drive mounts the virtual drive and how Windows handles Quick Access pins.
Here’s how to make it stick reliably:
✅ METHOD 1: Use the Real Path Instead of the Mounted Drive
- Don’t pin the mounted “G:” drive (or whatever letter Google Drive uses).
- Instead, navigate to the real path, which is usually:
C:\Users\<YourUsername>\Google Drive
or sometimes:C:\Users\<YourUsername>\My Drive
- Right-click that folder and choose “Pin to Quick Access”.
- Reboot and check.
Why this works:
The mounted drive (like
G:
) may not be initialized early enough during boot for Quick Access to persist the pin. The local folder path is stable and initializes earlier.
✅ METHOD 2: Use a Symbolic Link (if Method 1 doesn’t work)
- Open Command Prompt as Administrator.
- Run:
mklink /D "%USERPROFILE%\GoogleDriveLink" "G:\My Drive"
(Adjust"G:\My Drive"
if your drive letter or path is different.) - This creates a symlink folder inside your user folder.
- Now pin the
GoogleDriveLink
folder to Quick Access.
This makes Windows think it’s a local folder, so it retains the Quick Access pin across reboots.
✅ METHOD 3: Re-pin After Boot with Script (Less Ideal)
If all else fails, you can write a small PowerShell script to re-pin the folder after boot. This is more of a workaround than a fix.
📌 Extra Tips
- Avoid pinning network/mounted drives directly.
- Make sure Google Drive loads at startup, or pins may fail silently.
- Try unpinning any broken Google Drive links before repinning.