Published: April 14, 2026 Reading time: 6 minutes
Windows scans live file names and contents on every search (slow). With indexing: Windows queries a pre-built database (fast—often under one second).
Have a folder that absolutely must be searchable but still doesn’t show up? Drop it in the comments (or your internal IT ticket)—but 99% of the time, the fix is simply adding it to the index manually. Did this guide help? Share it with a colleague who still clicks through folders one by one.
This guide will walk you through everything from basic indexing concepts to advanced tweaks that will transform how you find files. Think of indexing like a library’s card catalog. Instead of searching every shelf (your hard drive) every time you look for a book, the catalog tells you exactly where it is. Windows Search maintains a hidden database of metadata and content from your files—filenames, paths, authors, tags, and even text inside documents.