Can you resell a used Win 7 license?

coorsleftfield

New member
Supposed you buy the retail win 7, load it on a computer and activate. After a few months usage, you decide to go with Ubuntu, or sell the machine without harddrive in it,whatever. Point is your not using win7 anymore.

Can Microsoft "de-activate" the product key so if you put the win7 pack up on ebay, the new owner can activate without any problems? Does the EULA ban re-sale in any way once activated?
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
There is no difference between what you describe and giving away the disc, but I doubt that MS is going to deactivate it...
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
LENOVO K450 @3.0GHZ
OS
64-bit Windows 8.1 Pro
CPU
Core(TM) i5 CPU 4330 Haswell @ 3.20GHz
Motherboard
LENOVO
Memory
12.00 GB
Graphics Card(s)
Intel(R) HD Graphics
Sound Card
Intel HD integtrated
Monitor(s) Displays
HP 25' ISP Monitor
Screen Resolution
1900/1020
Hard Drives
(1) ST1000DM003-1CH162 (2) Generic STORAGE DEVICE USB Device (3) Generic STORAGE DEVICE USB Device
Internet Speed
100mb down/10mb up
If it's full retail I don't see why not. Starting with Vista Microsoft relaxed the transfer terms somewhat because even the retail versions were hitherto restricted on how many times one could move the OS from one system or PC to another.

You can transfer your license of Windows Vista to another user provided that you uninstall the original copy and do not keep any of the materials from the original installation.

Google will help you with this question.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Alienware® ALX X58
OS
Win 7 Ult SP1/Win 10 Pro (all x64)
CPU
Intel® Core™ i7-975 Extreme O/C to 4.02 GHz, 8MB Cache
Motherboard
Asus® P6T Deluxe V2 X58 LGA1366
Memory
24GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz - 6 x 4096MB
Graphics Card(s)
1792 MB NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 295 Dual Core
Sound Card
Onboard Soundmax® High-Definition 7.1 Performance Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung XL2370 LED backlit 23" W/S 2ms response time
Screen Resolution
1920 X 1080
Hard Drives
2 x 500gb SATA II
1 x 1TB SATA II
1 external eSATA LaCie 3TB
(Non-RAID)
PSU
Alienware® 1200 Watt Multi-GPU
Case
Alienware® P2 ALX Chassis with AlienIce™ 3.0 Video Cooling
Cooling
Alienware® High-Perf. Liquid Cooling + Acoustic Dampening
Keyboard
Microsoft® Wireless Entertainment 8000 + Logitech® G15 Wired
Mouse
Microsoft® Wireless Laser 8000 + Logitech® G9 Wired
Internet Speed
1Gb/s
Antivirus
McAfee LiveSafe
Browser
Firefox - latest
Other Info
Using non-RAID on purpose as I find RAID to be too temperamental.
Now set to AHCI
As far as I understand it, as long as you uninstall Windows 7 before selling it there should be no problem.
Microsoft apparently has a way to detect if an activation code is already in use, so if you tried to install it on a 2nd machine while the first one still has it installed, you'll probably be unable to do activate it.
 

My Computer

OS
XP/7
Yes, but the person who's purchasing might need to call for activation verification and might need your help to assure MS that its not already running in another PC, otherwise the registration might get locked :p
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Bo's "Kitchen" - Custom
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
CPU
Intel Core2 Quad
Motherboard
i7 extreme
Memory
4gb ddr2 1066
Graphics Card(s)
8800GTS
Sound Card
Realtec
Monitor(s) Displays
Sony HD
Hard Drives
1 TB Western Digital
Cooling
Thermaltake Spin-Q Universal CPU Cooler
Microsoft apparently has a way to detect if an activation code is already in use

Once a product key is activated it then corresponds to a PID which is composed of various things like the current hardware installed in the computer. If you keep installing it on the same computer there is no problem. But when you start using that key on another machines it will probably work a few times but eventually you'll run out of activations and be forced to call Microsoft. This prevents the same product key from being circulated and used by everyone on the internet.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Too many to list.
OS
XP, Seven, 2008R2
CPU
AMD, Intel, VIA
Motherboard
Various
Memory
Corsair, Kingston, etc.
Graphics Card(s)
ATI, NVIDIA
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
Hard Drives
Maxtor, Western Digital
Keyboard
qwerty
Internet Speed
22 Mb/s @ home, 1 Gb/s @ server
Other Info
All of my systems still run fastest on XP 32-bit for the most part. Win7 is fun to play with, but I still prefer XP for raw speed, security, and functionality.
Once a product key is activated it then corresponds to a PID which is composed of various things like the current hardware installed in the computer. If you keep installing it on the same computer there is no problem. But when you start using that key on another machines it will probably work a few times but eventually you'll run out of activations and be forced to call Microsoft. This prevents the same product key from being circulated and used by everyone on the internet.

The "PID" key is a unique numeric identifier for each hardware componenet in your PC. Its like a "VIN" on your car. you may have 2 identical Camaros down to the last detail but they will always be identified by the VIN that comes with the vehicle. ;)

its exactly the same with the PID and the way the Win7 installation works is it records the PID of your current computer where you are installing the New OS.

Now your system will trigger an Activation Verification if you make any hardware changes that would go past a particular "threshold". That threshold is currently set at 80% and Microsoft has assigned each hardware components corresponding values:

Processor and MOBO 70%
Ram and Graphics is 10% each

Obviously changes on your computer for the above mentioned parts that goes past 80% will trigger the activation.

Ergo if you install Win7 on a second computer even if the setup is completely identical to the first computer the unique PID will trigger the activation. :p
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Bo's "Kitchen" - Custom
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
CPU
Intel Core2 Quad
Motherboard
i7 extreme
Memory
4gb ddr2 1066
Graphics Card(s)
8800GTS
Sound Card
Realtec
Monitor(s) Displays
Sony HD
Hard Drives
1 TB Western Digital
Cooling
Thermaltake Spin-Q Universal CPU Cooler
The only question Microsoft has ever asked me, on numerous re-activation calls is, "Is this the only computer the software is currently installed on?" Say yes, and if it's true, you won't have any problems.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate RTM (Technet)
CPU
3.00 gigahertz Intel Core2 Duo E8400
Motherboard
ASUSTeK Computer INC. P5K/EPU Rev 1.xx
Memory
4GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon X1950 Pro
Sound Card
Built in HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
22" Gateway LCD
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1200
Hard Drives
ST3160023A [Hard drive] (160.04 GB) -- drive 0, rev 8.01, ST3500630AS [Hard drive] (500.11 GB) -- drive 2, rev 3.AAK
ST3500630AS [Hard drive] (500.11 GB) -- drive 1, rev 3.AAK
Keyboard
Logitech G11
Mouse
Microsoft Wireless Laser Mouse 5000
Internet Speed
13.44 Mbps
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