How to Fix Windows Error 0x80030306
By Sai Kiran Pandrala · reviewed by Sai Kiran Pandrala, Editor Last verified: 2026-05-25
0x80030306 (STG_E_CSS_AUTHENTICATION_FAILURE) on Windows is a structured storage status code: the system is telling you Copy Protection Error,DVD CSS Authentication failed. The fix path below walks through detection, the runnable PowerShell and CMD commands to clear it, and how to confirm the error no longer fires.
| Error code | 0x80030306 |
|---|---|
| Decimal (unsigned) | 2147681030 |
| Decimal (signed 32-bit) | -2147286266 |
| Symbolic name | STG_E_CSS_AUTHENTICATION_FAILURE |
| Platform | Windows |
| Subsystem | structured storage (Ole32 IStorage / IStream) |
| Severity field | Warning (top bits 10) |
| Official message (verbatim) | Copy Protection Error,DVD CSS Authentication failed. |
| Source | Microsoft MS-ERREF (HRESULT values) |
What is 0x80030306?
0x80030306 is returned by the structured-storage API. These errors mean a compound file (any file built on IStorage, such as legacy Office documents or Outlook PST/MSG) could not be opened, locked, transacted, or committed as requested. In plain English, the system is telling you Copy Protection Error,DVD CSS Authentication failed. Microsoft documents it as a structured storage value, which means applications hit it when they call into the Ole32 IStorage / IStream stack. The STG_E_CSS_AUTHENTICATION_FAILURE symbol shows up in header files, debugger output, and event log messages, so searching for it in the calling application's source or trace logs usually pinpoints where the call originated.
When does 0x80030306 appear?
The structured storage layer raises this code in a few well-known scenarios. Knowing which one you are in saves an hour of guessing:
- The compound file is open in another process and locked.
- Transacted-mode commit could not flush to disk.
- The storage was opened with the wrong share mode.
- The file is truncated, corrupted, or zero bytes long.
Use Sysinternals handle.exe to find the other process holding the file, then retry after closing it. If your event log shows the code firing alongside a specific component or service name, that name is the real starting point - the 0x80030306 value just tells you the class of failure.
How to fix 0x80030306
Work the steps below in order. Each one is a real, runnable PowerShell or CMD block. Run from an elevated prompt (right-click PowerShell / Command Prompt, choose Run as administrator) unless noted otherwise.
Step 1: find any other process holding the compound file open
:: Sysinternals handle.exe lists all open handles by file path.
:: Download from https://learn.microsoft.com/sysinternals/downloads/handle
handle.exe "C:\Path\To\file.docx"
# Pure-PowerShell alternative using openfiles.
openfiles /query /fo table /v | Select-String "file.docx"
Step 2: validate the file is not zero-byte or truncated
# Confirm size and last-modified timestamps look sane.
Get-Item "C:\Path\To\file.docx" | Format-List FullName, Length, LastWriteTime
# Hash the file and compare against a known-good copy if you have one.
Get-FileHash "C:\Path\To\file.docx" -Algorithm SHA256
Step 3: restore the previous version from VSS
:: List shadow copies that contain the file.
vssadmin list shadows /for=C:
:: Mount a shadow copy and recover the older version of the compound file.
mklink /d C:\ShadowMount \\?\GLOBALROOT\Device\HarddiskVolumeShadowCopy<N>\
copy "C:\ShadowMount\Users\<user>\Documents\file.docx" "C:\Recovered\file.docx"
rmdir C:\ShadowMount
Step 4: open with the matching application to attempt repair
# For Office compound files, the application can often repair on open.
Start-Process winword.exe -ArgumentList '/r','C:\Path\To\file.docx'
# For PST/MSG files, run scanpst.exe (ships with Outlook).
& "$env:ProgramFiles\Microsoft Office\root\Office16\SCANPST.EXE"
If you can't fix immediately
Sometimes the failure window matters more than the root cause. While you schedule the real fix, these mitigations buy time:
- Restart the service that owns the failing call. Many
structured storageerrors come from a state that resets cleanly on service restart (Restart-Service <name> -Force). - Reboot the host if a kernel-side component is involved. NTSTATUS and driver-related codes often clear after a clean reboot.
- Temporarily lower the calling code's reliance on the failing path (disable the optional feature, fall back to a known-good code path, or queue the work for retry once the underlying fix lands).
- Capture a full repro with Procmon and a matching event log export so the real fix is one trace away when the maintenance window opens.
How to verify the fix worked
After applying the steps above, confirm 0x80030306 is no longer raised by the failing operation. Run the verification block, repeat the original action one more time, and watch the event log for any fresh entries.
Verify the error no longer surfaces
# 1. Re-run the original operation that produced 0x80030306.
# 2. Re-query the System log for the code and confirm no new entries land.
Get-WinEvent -LogName System -MaxEvents 50 |
Where-Object { $_.Message -match '0x80030306' } |
Sort-Object TimeCreated -Descending |
Select-Object -First 5 TimeCreated, Id, Message
# 3. Same for the Application log.
Get-WinEvent -LogName Application -MaxEvents 50 |
Where-Object { $_.Message -match '0x80030306' } |
Sort-Object TimeCreated -Descending |
Select-Object -First 5 TimeCreated, Id, Message
# 4. Confirm the calling process exited cleanly.
$LASTEXITCODE
:: If the failing operation was driven from CMD, %ERRORLEVEL% should be 0.
echo %ERRORLEVEL%
If the verification block returns no new entries that mention 0x80030306 or STG_E_CSS_AUTHENTICATION_FAILURE in the time window after your fix, you can close out the incident. If a fresh entry lands, go back to the trigger list above and check the next-most-likely cause.
Frequently asked questions
What does 0x80030306 mean exactly?
It is a structured storage code returned by Ole32 IStorage / IStream. In short, the system is telling you Copy Protection Error,DVD CSS Authentication failed.
Is 0x80030306 dangerous?
By itself this surfaces as a warning, not a critical failure. The code is a signal, not a fault. It tells you the structured storage layer rejected (or could not finish) a specific call. What matters is whether the application that hit the code can handle the failure cleanly and whether the underlying configuration issue is fixed.
Will reinstalling Windows fix 0x80030306?
Almost never. Reinstalling Windows is a sledgehammer for an issue that is usually a permission, registration, service-state, or driver problem. Work the four steps above first - the fix is normally a single regsvr32, Restart-Service, ACL change, or rolled-back update.
Is 0x80030306 the same as STG_E_CSS_AUTHENTICATION_FAILURE?
STG_E_CSS_AUTHENTICATION_FAILURE is the symbolic name Microsoft assigned to 0x80030306. They are the same value. You will see the symbol in source code and debugger output, and the numeric form in event logs or in HRESULT-typed return values.
Where can I find the official Microsoft documentation for 0x80030306?
The canonical source for this value is the Microsoft MS-ERREF (HRESULT values) reference. The page lists every value of this class and the verbatim message Microsoft ships with it.
Related error codes
- How to fix 0x80030305 - STG_E_STATUS_COPY_PROTECTION_FAILURE
- How to fix 0x80030307 - STG_E_CSS_KEY_NOT_PRESENT
- How to fix 0x80030308 - STG_E_CSS_KEY_NOT_ESTABLISHED
- How to fix 0x80030309 - STG_E_CSS_SCRAMBLED_SECTOR
- How to fix 0x8003030A - STG_E_CSS_REGION_MISMATCH
Related fixes
Related guides worth a look while you sort this one out:
- How to Fix Windows Error 0x80030110
- How to Fix Windows Error 0x80030111
- How to Fix Windows Error 0x80030112
- How to Fix Windows Error 0x80030201
- How to Fix Windows Error 0x80030202
- How to Fix Windows Error 0x80030305
References
- Microsoft MS-ERREF (HRESULT values): https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-erref/705fb797-2175-4a90-b5a3-3918024b10b8
- Microsoft Learn - Win32 system error codes: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/debug/system-error-codes
- Microsoft MS-ERREF (full Windows error code reference): https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-erref/
- Microsoft Learn - HRESULT structure: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-erref/0642cb2f-2075-4469-918c-4441e69c548a
- Sysinternals Procmon (live trace tool): https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/downloads/procmon
Compiled from the Microsoft MS-ERREF reference and the Windows debug error reference, last verified on 2026-05-25. Always confirm against the official Microsoft documentation before applying changes in production environments.
Field notes from real Windows incidents
When I work on the 0x80030306 symptom the rhythm I lean on is the one I have built over years of these tickets. Reliability Monitor is the single most underused triage surface in Windows — it gives 30 days of crash history without writing a query. Windows error codes come in a handful of families; once you recognise the family, the doc page is one search away. STOP codes look terrifying but the first DWORD almost always points directly at the responsible driver.
Tools I actually reach for
For the 0x80030306 symptom on Windows the cheapest signal I can land usually comes from Reliability Monitor (perfmon /rel), then DISM and sfc, Windows Error Lookup Tool (err.exe) when Reliability Monitor (perfmon /rel) cannot see the layer the fault sits in, and Process Monitor (procmon) for the cases where neither of those answers cleanly. That ordering is not academic. It matches the layers the failure tends to surface through, so the cheap signal lands first and the heavier tooling only comes out when the simpler answer does not hold up under scrutiny.
Verification I run before I close the ticket
Before I mark the 0x80030306 symptom resolved on a Windows unit, the verification loop below is what I actually run. Each step proves a different layer is green, and the order matters - the cheap checks gate the more expensive ones.
DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealthIf that one comes back clean, move to the next check. If it does not, stop and dig in there before layering more verification on top of a red signal.
sfc /scannowIf that one comes back clean, move to the next check. If it does not, stop and dig in there before layering more verification on top of a red signal.
Get-WinEvent -FilterHashtable @{LogName='System'; Level=1,2; StartTime=(Get-Date).AddDays(-7)}Only when every line above runs clean do I close the ticket and update the runbook with the timestamps.
Where I check first when the docs disagree
When two sources contradict each other on a Windows detail, the disambiguation order I lean on is stable. I usually start at support.microsoft.com for the ground-truth view on Windows. I usually start at github.com/microsoft/Windows-Driver-Frameworks for the ground-truth view on Windows. I usually start at techcommunity.microsoft.com/category/windows for the ground-truth view on Windows. I usually start at learn.microsoft.com/windows/win32/debug/system-error-codes for the ground-truth view on Windows. Random blog posts and reseller wikis are signal, not ground truth, and I treat them as such until the references above either confirm or contradict the claim.
Pitfalls I have walked into on this exact path
The shortcuts that look smart on the 0x80030306 symptom have a habit of biting back. The pitfalls below are the ones I have personally walked into on a Windows unit, not things I read about. Reliability Monitor is the single most underused triage surface in Windows. it gives 30 days of crash history without writing a query. DISM RestoreHealth needs network or a known-good source image; the most common cause of a failed RestoreHealth is a blocked Windows Update endpoint. When in doubt I revert to the slower path that the manual prescribes - the time I save by skipping it is always smaller than the time I spend cleaning up afterwards.
What I tell the next on-call
When I hand the 0x80030306 symptom off to the next person on rotation, the three lines I leave in the runbook are these. First, the symptom signature for Windows on the Windows family - not a paraphrase, the exact string that surfaces. Second, the diagnostic that gave the highest signal in the least time. Third, the exact verification command whose green output justified closing the ticket. That trio is what turns a one-off fix into a runbook entry the next engineer can use without paging me at three in the morning.
I also add a one-line note on the cost of getting this wrong. For the 0x80030306 symptom on a Windows unit, the cost is rarely the replacement part. It is the downtime, the second site visit, and the trust deficit you spend with whoever owns the asset when the fix does not hold. That framing keeps the next on-call from choosing the cheap-looking shortcut that ends up costing the most in elapsed hours and goodwill.