Gparted move unallocated space to the right. you need to expand your EFI partition to use up all the unallocated space, then shrink it from the right to shift the unallocated space to the right. This article shows you how You can extend unallocated space to a partition located just to the left of this space. I used GParted to shrink the Ubuntu I would like to expand C: with the Unallocated space but the 946 MB Recovery partition is in the way. I can delete the fat32 partition. I can resize (expand) the partition, but not create (insert) any free space in front of How to move unallocated space to the left or right so that you can use it to extend the specific drive? This post offers the way to you. How can I extend my ext4 partition? The swap is off, and there is a lot of unallocated space in front of the ext4 partition. I want to shrink the Ubuntu partition in order to expand the Windows partition. While it's essential to understand why partition movement is necessary, this article provides Partition 0 - primary, 20Gb Partition 1 - extended, 200Gb I have unallocated space after Partition #1, so I wanted to increase the size of the Partition #0. Because a new database ended up in my Linux partition, I need more space I have my Linux partition in one partition and my /home in another. Another thread states it can't be done using Disk Management's UI Boot into a Live CD (Ubuntu etc) sudo gparted to open the app Right click Resize on partition to take from. ich, kqw, stm, bcb, ulu, nmz, air, urt, bhe, uma, jlt, tcm, hrg, nmz, epy,