Windows Symlink: Folder ((better))
mklink /D "C:\Work\ProjectX" "D:\CloudSync\ProjectX" Now OneDrive (watching D:\CloudSync ) backs up your files, while your application happily writes to C:\Work\ProjectX . Instead of navigating \\Server\Shared\Departments\Finance\Reports\2025\Q1 , create a symlink on your desktop:
| Feature | Symbolic Link (Symlink) | Junction | Hard Link | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Local or network (UNC) path | Local volume only | Not possible for folders | | Relative paths | Yes | No | N/A | | Cross-volume | Yes | Yes | N/A | | Shows real path | No (transparent) | No | N/A | | Best for | Cloud folders, network drives, portable links | Legacy apps, same-drive redirection | (Files only) | windows symlink folder
Enter the for folders. It’s a advanced feature that acts as a magic mirror: a folder that points to another folder. When any program or user accesses the symlink, Windows silently redirects them to the real target. When any program or user accesses the symlink,
Get-Item "C:\SomeFolder" | Select-Object LinkType, Target If it returns LinkType: SymbolicLink , you’ve found one. Windows folder symlinks are one of the most underrated power tools in the OS. They allow you to decouple where data lives from where applications expect it to live, solve disk space shortages, and streamline workflows without hacking registry keys or installing quirky software. They allow you to decouple where data lives
Once you start using mklink /D , you’ll wonder how you ever managed without it. Just remember the golden rule: