3 Working Methods To Install Windows 11 On Unsupported PCs
3 Working Methods To Install Windows 11 On Unsupported PCs
• Sysadmin
Geekflare is supported by our audience. We may earn affiliate commissions from buying links on this site.
Upgrading your PC to the latest version of Windows is indeed the right move to keep up with the latest advances, but unlike previous versions of
Windows, Windows 11 is a bit snobby.
I have managed to install Windows 10 on PCs that could barely boot it. However, Windows 11 literally refused to install on my 7th Gen Core i7
PC. As much of an “am I not good enough for you anymore?!” moment it was, solving the issue was as simple as turning on some features.
The real challenge for me was to install Windows 11 on much older PCs, including a 2nd Gen PC with legacy BIOS. Thankfully, after one week
of experiments and formatting the data on 2 of my PCs twice (unintentionally), all 3 of my PCs are currently running on Windows 11.
Today, I’ll share all the methods I used that successfully installed Windows 11 on all my new and older PCs. So, these methods will work if you
have a not-so-old PC that got turned down by Windows 11 or you want to force install Windows 11 on a really old PC just to check out
those exciting new features.
And be assured, I have only picked the methods that will not have any harmful impact on your PC, like losing data.
So bear in mind these consequences before installing Windows 11 on your unsupported PC, as no one will take responsibility for any damage
done to your data or device.
From my personal experience, Windows 11 has been working perfectly fine on all my PCs for the few weeks I have used it. However, I am not
keeping any critical data on the unsupported devices as I don’t trust the security and stability.
In most cases, these two features are available on the PC but are disabled by default. So all you need to do is enable them and then try installing
Windows 11.
Unfortunately, I can’t provide precise instructions to enable both of these options as they are enabled in the BIOS, which differs from
manufacturer to manufacturer. However, I am still going to provide instructions that should work for most PC.
First, you need to access the BIOS, which you can do so by repeatedly pressing the F10, F2, F12, F1, or DEL key while the PC is starting. The
key you need to press depends on the PC manufacturer. For example, HP PCs use the F12 key.
Once inside, You’ll find both TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot under the Security menu. On some PCs, the Secure Boot option might be under
the Boot menu. Make sure you select “Save changes and exit” when closing the BIOS to apply the changes.
You can easily download Windows 11 ISO file from the Microsoft website. Just scroll down and click on Download under the Download
Windows 11 Disk Image (ISO) section. You’ll need to select your Windows language afterward to get the link to download it.
You need to make different entries depending on what features your PC already supports. I’ll explain them below:
Warning: Making a wrong entry in the Registry can hurt your PC, including Windows corruption or data loss. So before making the below
changes, either manually backing up the Registry or use a registry cleaner to automatically backup and restore it.
If your PC has TPM 1.2 support but lacks in CPU requirement or TPM 2.0 support, then you need to make the below-mentioned change in the
Registry:
Open the Registry by either searching in the Windows search or using a run command by pressing Windows+R keys and typing regedit in the
Run dialog.
Here move to this location HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE > SYSTEM > Setup > MoSetup. You can also copy/paste the below-mentioned
location in the search bar at the top of the Registry interface to directly lead to this location.
\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\Setup\MoSetup
While the MoSetup folder is selected, right-click on the empty white space in the right panel and select DWORD (32-bit) Value from
the New option.
A new entry will be created. Name the entry AllowUpgradesWithUnsupportedTPMOrCPU and then double click on it and select its value
as 1.
Now go ahead and install Windows 11 using a bootable USB or mounted ISO. The TPM 2.0 and CPU limitation will not bother.
If your PC doesn’t support TPM and Secure Boot, you need to create two entries in the Registry. Let’s see how to do it:
In the Registry, move to the location HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE > SYSTEM > Setup. You can copy/paste the below-mentioned path in the
Registry search bar too:
\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\Setup
Right-click on Setup and select New > Key to create a new entry under it and name that new entry LabConfig.
While LabConfig is selected, right-click on an empty space in the right panel and select DWORD (32-bit) Value from the New option.
Name this entry BypassTPMCheck and then double-click on it and change its value to 00000001.
This will disable the TPM check, but you need to create another entry here for the Secure Boot check.
Right-click again in the empty white space inside LabConfig and select DWORD (32-bit) Value from the New option.
Name it BypassSecureBootCheck and double click on it, and set its value to 00000001 too.
Now Windows 11 installation process will not check for TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot.
To do this, you’ll need to use the popular bootable USB drive creation tool, Rufus. The developers of Rufus have made available a new option
for creating Windows 11 bootable USB where it removes the feature that checks for TPM and Secure Boot support. Here’s how to use it:
Make sure you have the Windows 11 ISO in hand and then download Rufus.
Plugin a USB drive of at least 8GB in your PC and then launch the Rufus app. In the Device section, the attached USB will automatically be
selected.
In the Boot selection section, click on Select and then find and open the Windows 11 ISO that you downloaded.
A new Image option section will appear. Here select Extended Windows 11 Installation.
Afterward, select MBR or GPT partition scheme depending on your PC’s disk partition scheme.
The rest of the options are not mandatory to tweak to make this work, but you can make changes if you know what you are doing.
Now hit the START button, and the app will create a bootable USB drive that won’t check for TPM or Secure Boot support. You can use that to
either upgrade the current system or any other PC.
I successfully upgraded both Windows 10 and Windows 7 using this process. In a dual-boot setup, just make sure you follow this process in the
Windows version that you want to upgrade. Let’s get started:
I am assuming you already have the Windows 11 ISO file with you, so what you need now is a Windows 10 bootable USB drive.
Creating a Windows 10 bootable drive is really easy, just connect an 8GB or bigger USB drive with your PC and download Windows 10 media
creation tool. The media creation tool will automatically download the Windows 10 and create the bootable drive.
Once a bootable USB is created, follow the below steps exactly as I say.
Step 1: You need to mount Windows 11 ISO first. On Windows 8, 8.1, or 10, you can right-click the file and select Mount. On older versions,
you need to use third-party mounting software like WinCDEmu.
Step 2: Once mounted, go to the sources folder inside Windows 11 and copy (Ctrl+C) a file named install.wim.
Step 3: Now open the bootable Windows 10 USB drive in file explorer and move to its sources folder.
Step 4: Here, delete the file named install.esd and paste the install.wim file you just copied. If Windows gives an error that the file is too big to
move, you must convert your USB to the NTFS file system first.
Step 5: Now run the Windows 10 setup file inside the USB drive.
Step 6: Click on Change how Windows Setup downloads updates option and select Not right now.
Step 7: Click Next and Windows will ask to accept terms and conditions and then tell you what version of Windows 11 will be installed and
what data you’d like to keep.
Step 8: After you make your selection, Windows will go through the installation process and then restart the PC. Once it restarts, it will ask you
to either upgrade the current Windows or install it on a new drive. Make sure you select upgrade current Windows here.
That’s it. The Windows installation process will start. Also, even though the process will say ‘install Windows 10’, Windows 11 will be
installed.
Note: This is an unofficial hack, so it comes with the limitation of not being able to install Windows 11 by booting the PC with the USB. This is
the reason why I instructed you to choose to upgrade current Windows when asked after the restart instead of choosing to install in a new drive.
Otherwise, it will just give a drive error, and you’ll have to restart the process from inside the Windows.
Wrapping up
�
I personally think the 2nd method is the best as it can automatically handle all the complicating work and you won’t have to take any risk of
making changes to your PC. Although if nothing is working for you, the 3rd method will work as long as your PC can handle installing
Windows 10.
Installed it? No enhance your Windows 11 experience with these registry hacks.
TAGS:
• Windows
•
•
•
Make Your Windows 11 Desktop Come Alive With These 9 Wallpaper Apps
Invicti
Invicti uses the Proof-Based Scanning™ to automatically verify the identified vulnerabilities and generate
actionable results within just hours.
•
Brightdata
Web scraping, residential proxy, proxy manager, web unlocker, search engine crawler, and all you need to
collect web data.
EXPLORE
• Tech Articles
• Finance Articles
• Geekflare API
• Geekflare Tools
• Geekflare Compiler
• Geekflare Assist
COMPANY
• About
• Advertise
• Hiring
• Terms
• Privacy
• Disclosure
• Sitemap
• RSS Feed
Geekflare Newsletter is for anyone from beginner to experienced professionals who wants to keep their knowledge up-to-date.
Email Address*
Select Topic
Join
© 2022 · Geekflare