Formatting the GoPro's SD card gets the card ready for use and keeps the filesystem healthy and minimizes the risk of errors. Here are the various ways to do it on different GoPro models.
GoPro is running a deal on the new HERO9 Black, their newest and best camera. It's a bundle that includes the HERO9 Black, a 1-year subscription to GoPro, a free extra battery, and a 64GB SD card. It's all for $349.98.
SD cards are an essential accessory for your GoPro. You’re not going to get far without one.1 I’ve previously put together some recommendations on which SD card to get for specific GoPro models. Here I’m focusing on how to prep the card for use in the GoPro and how to keep its filesystem healthy and ready for use.
Formatting the SD does two things. It wipes all the data off the card to free up space for new photos and videos. It also prepares the card to be the way the camera wants it, including the appropriate filesystem and folder structure. A kind of conditioning, if you like.
Formatting is something you should do before you start using a card—and you’ll get prompted by the camera to do it if the card isn’t ready. And then you should also keep doing it routinely after that each time you’ve downloaded all the images and footage of the card.
As a rule, it’s best to format the card in the camera. That’s true not just for GoPros but for any camera. It is possible to format SD cards using a computer, and I have more details on that below, but it’s good practice to always do it in the camera to minimize the risks of data corruption or some kind of formatting issue that could interfere with shooting.
It’s also worth doing regularly. That again maximizes the chance that the SD card’s filesystem is healthy. I do it whenever I’ve finished downloading the files to my computer after a shoot. Or you could do it after uploading the files to a cloud service such as GoPro Plus.
There are a few different ways that GoPros can format the card. The process does vary a little between models, but the general approach is the same. And on some GoPros you can choose among more than one way of doing it. Some GoPros, for instance, give you the option of using the menu on the touchscreen, the buttons and the front status screen, or the GoPro mobile app. On other GoPros, only one or two of those options are available.
All of the GoPros that come with a built-in touchscreen have the formatting option as part of the menu system. The terminology isn’t always exactly the same, but in general, you want to go into settings and find the option to refers to resetting the memory card.
Here are some examples:
On GoPros with only a small screen on the front, such as the HERO4 Black and the HERO3 and HERO3+ models, you can use a combination of the power button on the side and the shutter button on the top to navigate through the menu system to the format SD card function. Some of the newer models, such as the HERO5 Black, HERO6 Black, HERO7 Black, or HERO (2018) also have a small front screen, but on those models, you can’t access the settings menu with it—it’s only for switching shooting modes.
The camera then starts the formatting, and the camera’s light and the trashcan icon on the screen will both start blinking to denote that the formatting is in process. The blinking will stop once the process is complete.
The GoPro mobile app also includes the function to format the SD card.
Again, the terminology hasn’t always been completely consistent between versions of the app, and it’s not consistent between the camera’s menu and the app’s menu, but the current version of the GoPro app calls it “Delete All Files from SD Card”.
While it’s best practice to format the SD card in the GoPro camera itself, it is possible to format it using a computer. There are a couple of main options and some things to watch out for.
SD Card Formatter. The safest, most reliable, and simplest is to use the free app that the SD Association makes available specifically to set SD and microSD cards up to be fully compliant. It’s called SD Card Formatter, and you can download for free directly from the SD Association’s website.
There’s nothing complicated about using this app—the whole point is that it’s a foolproof way to use the appropriate format for the type of card—but I’ve put together a more detailed walk-thru here.
Operating System Disk Utilities. Another option is to use the operating system’s built-in disk utility. With Windows 10, go to Control Panel > Administrative Tools > Computer Management > Disk Management. On Mac, use Disk Utility.
As for the formatting type, there are some specific requirements according to the size of the storage capacity of your memory card. If it’s 32GB or smaller, choose FAT32, which conforms to the microSDHC standard. If it’s 64GB or larger, choose exFAT, which is what the microSDXC standard specifies.2
There can be several reasons why photos and videos go missing from memory cards. But you can often recover at least some of them. I have a more detailed post on how to recover deleted GoPro videos and photos from SD cards, but here's the quick version:
This post was last modified on October 12, 2020 10:14 am