
This is the low-level software you can briefly enter when your computer is first starting up. If it is compatible, you can enable it in your system’s UEFI (sometimes still referred to as a BIOS, even though this term is largely deprecated). It should be next to System Model.) If it's not compatible, there are ways to bypass the requirements, but it requires a bit of technical know-how and we don't recommend it. (You can find your model by tapping the Windows key and typing System Information. Microsoft's official Windows 11 compatibility checker is back online too, though it's only available through the (free to join) Windows Insider Program right now, so you can use that to verify whether your PC meets the official requirements.Īnd if you're worried you might be stuck using Windows 10 for a while, don't be - Microsoft has promised to continue supporting it through October of 2025.First, look online to see if your motherboard model is TPM compatible. However, one of the trickiest things about Windows 11's TPM 2.0 requirement is that it can be hard to know if your machine even has a TPM 2.0 chip, since it's often disabled by default in newer PCs.īefore you worry too much, read our guide on how to check if your Windows PC has a TPM 2.0 chip - you might just need to enable it in your BIOS settings. Hopefully, this provides some relief for anyone fretting over having to buy a new PC (which is incredibly pricey right now, thanks to the ongoing chip shortage) in order to check out the next generation of Windows.


If you have at least that much, the Windows 11 installer will warn you that your PC is unsupported but should still let you complete the installation. So if you can in fact install Windows 11 on PCs that don't meet the minimum requirements and use it in an unsupported state, what's the real bare-minimum PC you'll need to run it on?īased on The Verge's reporting, it sounds like right now the only parts of the Windows 11 minimum requirements that are actually required is that your PC have a 64-bit 1GHz CPU with 2 or more cores, 4 GB of RAM, 64 GB of storage space, and a TPM 1.2 chip.

Moving from Windows 10 to 11 won't require a TPM 2.0 chip - but without one your copy of Windows may be more vulnerable to attack.
