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Home/ Questions/Q 909791
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T16:56:22+00:00 2026-05-15T16:56:22+00:00

I’m not looking for User SIDs. I’m looking for the computer SID, which active

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I’m not looking for User SIDs. I’m looking for the computer SID, which active directory would use to uniquely identify the computer. I also don’t want to query the active directory server, i want to query the computer itself.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T16:56:22+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 4:56 pm

    (Ooh, this was a fun one! I went on a wild goose chase, as they say, trying to get the Win32_SID instance, which is a singleton and not enumerable by the usual InstancesOf or Query methods… yadda yadda yadda.)

    Well, it depends which computer SID you want (seriously!). There’s the SID that the local computer uses for itself… For this, you just need to get the SID of the local Administrator user, and remove the “-500” from the end to get the computer’s SID.

    In VBScript, it looks like this:

    strComputer = "AFAPC001"
    strUsername = "Administrator"
    Set objWMIService = GetObject("winmgmts:\\" & strComputer & "\root\cimv2")
    Set objAccount = objWMIService.Get("Win32_UserAccount.Name='" & strUsername & "',Domain='" & strComputer & "'")
    WScript.Echo "Administrator account SID: " & objAccount.SID
    WScript.Echo "Computer's SID: " & Left(objAccount.SID, Len(objAccount.SID) - 4)
    

    In PowerShell, like this:

    function get-sid
    {
        Param ( $DSIdentity )
        $ID = new-object System.Security.Principal.NTAccount($DSIdentity)
        return $ID.Translate( [System.Security.Principal.SecurityIdentifier] ).toString()
    }
    > $admin = get-sid "Administrator"
    > $admin.SubString(0, $admin.Length - 4)
    

    In C# on .NET 3.5:

    using System;
    using System.Security.Principal;
    using System.DirectoryServices;
    using System.Linq;
    public static SecurityIdentifier GetComputerSid()
    {
        return new SecurityIdentifier((byte[])new DirectoryEntry(string.Format("WinNT://{0},Computer", Environment.MachineName)).Children.Cast<DirectoryEntry>().First().InvokeGet("objectSID"), 0).AccountDomainSid;
    }
    

    Results from all of these match the response I get from PsGetSid.exe.


    On the other hand, there’s the SID that Active Directory uses to identify each domain member computer… That one you fetch by getting the SID of the machine account in the domain–the one that ends with a dollar sign.

    E.g., using the above PowerShell function for a domain member called “CLIENT”, you can type get-sid "CLIENT$".

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