OneDrive & SharePoint — Self-Service Fix

What’s happening right now?

Pick your problem below. You’ll see only what’s relevant — no reading through stuff that doesn’t apply to you.

Tap the problem you’re experiencing
🔄

Sync is stuck or spinning

Try these in order — most stuck syncs fix themselves within 2 minutes.

1

Check your internet first

Open google.com. Does it load instantly? If yes, internet isn’t the problem. If it’s slow or down — that’s your answer. OneDrive will catch up automatically when the connection improves.

2

Pause sync, wait 30 seconds, resume

Click the OneDrive cloud icon in your taskbar (bottom-right) → click the gear ⚙️ → select Pause syncing → 2 minutes. Wait, then click Resume syncing. This clears stuck queues and fixes the problem the majority of the time.

3

Check if a file is blocking the queue

Click the OneDrive icon → look for any file showing a warning or error. A single stuck file can block everything behind it. If you see one, close that file completely (check your taskbar — it may still be open in the background).

4

Restart OneDrive completely

Right-click the OneDrive icon → Close OneDrive. Then press Windows key + R, paste this exactly, and press Enter:

%localappdata%\Microsoft\OneDrive\OneDrive.exe

5

Need the file right now? Use the browser.

Open Chrome or Edge → go to your SharePoint site → find the file and open it there. SharePoint browser always shows the live version. No sync required.

!

Still spinning after all that?

Call IT: 818-284-4117 or submit a ticket. Tell us what the OneDrive icon shows and which file (if any) is stuck.

📄📄

Conflict copy / duplicate file

This happens when two people edit the same file at the same time in the desktop app. Here’s how to fix it safely.

⚠️ Do not delete the conflict copy yet. It may contain work that didn’t make it into the main file. Follow these steps first.
1

Open both files side by side

Open the main file (the one with the normal name) and the conflict copy (the one with a long name including someone’s name and a date). Look at the content of both.

2

Copy any missing changes into the main file

The main file usually has the most recent content. The conflict copy has the other person’s version. Copy anything that’s missing from the conflict copy into the main file.

3

Save the main file and verify the green checkmark

Save the main file. Watch for the green ✅ checkmark. Once it appears, the merged version is live and everyone will see it.

4

Now delete the conflict copy

Once you’ve confirmed everything is merged into the main file, delete the conflict copy. Right-click → Delete.

Prevent this next time: When multiple people need to edit the same file, open it in your browser (SharePoint or Teams), not the desktop app. The browser handles multiple editors automatically — no conflicts possible.
🔍

File is missing / coworker can’t see changes

A few different things could be happening. Let’s figure out which one.

If YOU can’t find the file:
  • 1.Search in SharePoint browser (not File Explorer) — it searches the entire cloud library, not just what’s synced to your PC.
  • 2.Check if you accidentally saved to the wrong folder — look in your personal OneDrive vs. the shared SharePoint library.
  • 3.Check the SharePoint Recycle Bin — it might have been deleted. Left sidebar → Recycle Bin.
  • 4.Look for the file’s previous version: right-click in SharePoint browser → Version History.
If your COWORKER can’t see your changes:
  • 1.Check your OneDrive icon — is the file still syncing (spinner) or showing a warning? Your changes may not have uploaded yet.
  • 2.Ask your coworker to close and reopen the file — they may have a cached version that hasn’t refreshed.
  • 3.Confirm you’re both looking at the same file in the same folder — it’s easy to have two different paths open.
  • 4.Both of you open the file in SharePoint browser — you’ll both see the live version instantly.
Quick rule: If a file is critical, always verify in SharePoint browser that your changes are actually there before telling someone to look. What’s on your screen and what’s in the cloud can be different until sync completes.
🔒

File opens as read-only

Usually means someone else has it open, or the file is locked. Here’s how to get back in.

1

Someone else has the file open in the desktop app

Word and Excel lock files when someone opens them in the desktop application. Ask your team if anyone has it open. If yes, ask them to close it. Or — open it in the browser version instead. The browser handles multiple editors simultaneously with no locking.

2

A ghost lock file is stuck

Sometimes a file stays “locked” even after the person closes it — especially if their computer crashed. Look for a hidden file in the same folder starting with ~$ (like ~$Report.docx). Deleting that hidden file removes the lock.

3

You don’t have edit permissions

If neither of the above apply, you may not have permission to edit the file. Contact IT or your manager to request edit access for that folder.

Fastest workaround: open in browser

In File Explorer, right-click the file → Open in browser (or go to SharePoint directly). The online version of Word/Excel doesn’t lock files — multiple people can edit at the same time without any of this.

🗑️

Deleted something by accident

Good news — SharePoint keeps deleted files for 93 days. Here’s how to get it back right now.

1

Open SharePoint in your browser

Go to your company’s SharePoint site in Chrome or Edge. (Not File Explorer — the browser.)

2

Click “Recycle Bin” in the left sidebar

Scroll down the left navigation panel until you see Recycle Bin. Click it.

3

Find your file and click Restore

Check the box next to the file or folder you need → click Restore at the top. It goes back to exactly where it was.

4

Not in the Recycle Bin?

Contact IT immediately: 818-284-4117. We can check the second-stage recycle bin (administrator level) which holds files for another 93 days beyond the first bin. The sooner you call, the better.

93-day window: Files deleted from SharePoint go to the Recycle Bin for 93 days before being permanently removed. Don’t wait — restore it as soon as you notice it’s gone.
🐢

OneDrive is making my computer slow

OneDrive syncing in the background uses CPU, memory, and bandwidth. Here’s how to reduce its impact.

1

Pause sync during busy periods

If you’re on a video call, running a big report, or just need your computer to be fast right now — pause OneDrive. Click the icon → ⚙️ → Pause syncing → 2 hours. Resume it when you’re done with the heavy work. Your files are safe in the cloud.

2

Check how many files OneDrive is syncing

Click the OneDrive icon. If it says syncing thousands of files — something large just changed in the shared library. That’s temporary. It will finish and calm down on its own. You can pause it in the meantime.

3

Make sure Files On-Demand is turned on

Right-click OneDrive icon → Settings → Sync and backup → Advanced settings → make sure “Files On-Demand” is enabled. This keeps files in the cloud as placeholders instead of downloading everything — dramatically reduces local storage and sync load.

!

If it’s consistently slow — contact IT

You may be syncing far more than you need to. IT can limit your sync to only the folders you actually use, which fixes the slowdown without changing how you work. Call 818-284-4117.

🔴

Red X or error on a file

OneDrive can’t sync this file. Here are the most common causes and fixes.

1

Click the OneDrive icon and read the error message

Click the cloud icon in the taskbar. OneDrive will show the specific file and the reason it failed. Read it — it’s usually pretty clear about what’s wrong.

2

Check the file name for bad characters

OneDrive cannot sync files that have any of these characters in the name: / \ : * ? " < > | — or names that end with a period or space. Rename the file (remove the bad character) and sync will resume automatically.

3

The folder path might be too long

Windows has a 260-character limit on the full path to a file. If your file is buried in many nested folders, the total path can exceed this limit. Try moving the file to a folder closer to the top level, or shorten the folder names above it.

4

The file might be too large

OneDrive has a 250 GB per-file size limit. Files larger than that won’t sync. If you’re working with very large files (video, large data exports), contact IT about the right place to store them.

!

None of the above? Contact IT.

Tell us the file name, folder location, and the exact error message OneDrive shows. Call 818-284-4117 or submit a ticket.

Someone overwrote my work

SharePoint keeps a full version history of every file. Your work is almost certainly still there.

1

Open the file’s version history

Go to SharePoint in your browser. Find the file. Right-click it (or click the three dots ···) → select Version History. You’ll see a list of every saved version with timestamps and who saved it.

2

Find the version with your work

Look for the version saved right before the overwrite happened. Click it to preview — you’ll be able to see the content from that point in time.

3

Restore that version

Next to the version you want → click Restore. This makes that the current version of the file. Everyone will see your restored version going forward.

Prevent overwrites going forward: When multiple people need to edit the same file, use it in the browser version of Word or Excel. It shows who else is editing in real time and merges changes automatically — no one can overwrite anyone else.
📶

Working from home or a bad connection

Here’s how to stay productive when your internet isn’t great and OneDrive sync is unreliable.

1

Switch to wired ethernet if you can

A direct cable from your router to your laptop is dramatically faster and more stable than WiFi. If you have an ethernet port and a cable available — use it. OneDrive sync performance improves immediately.

2

Use SharePoint in your browser instead of synced files

On a slow connection, the browser version of SharePoint is often faster than waiting for sync. Open Chrome or Edge → go to your SharePoint site → open files directly there. You get the live version without downloading anything to your computer first.

3

Download files you need before going offline

If you know you’ll lose internet (flight, remote site, field work), download the files you need first. Right-click in File Explorer → Always keep on this device. They’ll be available offline and sync back up when you reconnect.

4

Pause sync during video calls

Teams calls and OneDrive syncing compete for the same bandwidth. Pause OneDrive before important calls: click the icon → ⚙️ → Pause syncing → 2 hours. Resume after the call ends.

5

On a mobile hotspot? Browser only.

Hotspot connections have limited bandwidth and high latency. Don’t rely on OneDrive sync at all — open everything through SharePoint in the browser. Save large uploads for when you’re back on a real connection.