Time is up for Windows 10. Letâs go over how to check if your computer is eligible to upgrade for Windows 11, what to do if it isnât, and how to turn on the hidden feature that might save you from buying a new one.
đ¤ Step 1: Check If Your PC Meets the Requirements
The quick list:
To officially run Windows 11, your PC needs:
- A 64-bit processor (Intel 8th gen or newer, AMD Ryzen 2000 or newer)
- 4 GB of RAM
- 64 GB of storage
- UEFI + Secure Boot
- TPM 2.0 (Trusted Platform Module)
- A graphics card that supports DirectX 12
- An internet connection (for setup and updates)
If you donât know what half of that means, donât worry â Microsoft made a free tool that checks for you.
đ§° Step 2: Use Microsoftâs PC Health Check Tool
1ď¸âŁ Go to Microsoftâs official site and download the PC Health Check App.
â https://aka.ms/GetPCHealthCheckApp
2ď¸âŁ Install it.
When it opens, youâll see a blue box that says âCheck now.â
3ď¸âŁ Click it.
Itâll take a few seconds to analyze your hardware and give you one of three answers:
- â
âThis PC meets Windows 11 requirements.â
â Youâre good to go! - â ď¸ âThis PC doesnât meet the requirements.â
â Scroll down. It will tell you why. - â âTPM or Secure Boot not enabled.â
â That oneâs fixable â weâll cover it next.
4ď¸âŁ You can close the app once you have your answer, but take note of which part failed.
đ Step 3: If It Says âNo TPMâ or âNo Secure Bootâ
That doesnât always mean youâre doomed â TPM might just be turned off.
Hereâs how to check it manually.
Check TPM status
- Press Windows Key + R
- Type tpm.msc â hit Enter
- If you see âTPM is ready for useâ, check the version:
- 2.0 = perfect!
- 1.2 = old, not officially supported (but there are workarounds).
- If it says âTPM not found,â you may need to turn it on in your BIOS.
âď¸ Step 4: Try Turning TPM On in BIOS (Itâs Not as Scary as It Sounds)
Important: BIOS screens vary. This is a general guide.
If youâre not comfortable poking around menus that look like they came from 1998, skip this step or look up your exact PC model.
To enter BIOS:
- Restart your computer.
- As soon as it restarts, repeatedly tap one of these keys:
- Del or F2 (common on desktops and Asus/Acer laptops)
- F10 (HP)
- F12 or Esc (Dell, Lenovo)
- Youâll see the BIOS/UEFI menu (usually blue or gray).
- Use your arrow keys (or mouse, if available) to find Security, Advanced, or Trusted Computing.
- Look for:
- TPM, fTPM (AMD), or PTT (Intel)
- Set it to Enabled.
- Save and Exit (usually F10).
Once Windows restarts, try running tpm.msc again â it should now show TPM 2.0 active.
đ§ą Step 5: Enable Secure Boot (Youâll Need This Too)
If PC Health Check says âSecure Boot isnât supportedâ:
- Re-enter BIOS.
- Find Boot or Security tab.
- Look for Secure Boot â Enabled.
- Save & Exit.
If itâs grayed out, your drive may be using an old boot mode (Legacy). You can switch to UEFI in BIOS, but thatâs an advanced move â donât try it unless youâve backed up your files and are comfy with reinstalling Windows if things go sideways.
đ˝ Step 6: If It Still Wonât Let You Upgrade AutomaticallyâŚ
You can install Windows 11 manually from a flash drive â but this is for confident users only.
Youâll need:
- A 16 GB USB flash drive
- A backup of every file you care about
- A bit of patience
To create the installer:
- Go to Microsoftâs Windows 11 Download Page
â https://www.microsoft.com/software-download/windows11 - Click Create Windows 11 Installation Media
- Insert your flash drive and follow the prompts.
When itâs done, plug it into the computer you want to upgrade.
To install:
- Restart and press the Boot Menu key (usually F12 or Esc).
- Choose the USB drive.
- Follow the on-screen instructions to install Windows 11.
â ď¸ Caution:
- If you choose âKeep my files,â things usually work fine â but not always.
- A clean install (deletes everything) is safer long-term.
- Have a backup and a recovery plan before you begin.
đ§Š Bonus Option: Windows 11 âBypassâ Installers (Only for Tech-Confident Folks)
There are unofficial methods (using tools like Rufus) that remove the TPM/Secure Boot checks and let you install Windows 11 anyway.
They work â but they arenât supported by Microsoft, and updates could stop working at any time.
If you try it:
- Back up your data first.
- Expect hiccups (missing drivers, slower performance, random bugs).
- Donât do it on a computer you absolutely rely on for work or finances.
đ§Ż Bottom Line
| Situation | What to Do |
|---|---|
| â Your PC passes all checks | Go ahead and upgrade â youâre future-proof. |
| â ď¸ TPM/Secure Boot disabled | Try enabling them in BIOS â may solve it. |
| â Old CPU or hardware | Stay on Windows 10 (for now), follow safety steps, plan to upgrade later. |
| đ§Ş Feeling techy | Try the USB or Rufus method â at your own risk. |
đ§ Final Thoughts
You donât have to panic-buy a new laptop.
A little patience, a few settings tweaks, and one flash drive might buy you years of extra life out of your old PC.
And remember: always back up before you experiment.
Otherwise, you may find yourself learning about âdata recovery softwareâ the hard way.
Computers are like cats â they can survive on their own, but things go better when you back them up
fantastic guidance and info. thanks for sending this.