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Microsoft Makes Point-in-Time Restore Generally Available for Windows 11
Microsoft has made point-in-time restore generally available for Windows 11, giving users and IT administrators a built-in way to roll back PCs after bad updates, driver problems, app corruption or other disruptions.
The feature, announced Tuesday, is available for Windows 11 client PCs running version 24H2 and later across Windows Enterprise, Pro and Home editions. Microsoft is positioning it as part of a broader Windows resiliency effort aimed at reducing downtime when endpoints become unstable or unbootable.
"Every minute of downtime matters," Microsoft's Lia Vargas said in a blog announcement, noting that recovery often forces IT teams into lengthy troubleshooting sessions or full device rebuilds.
Point-in-time restore is designed to avoid that by automatically creating local restore points on a predictable schedule. Those restore points can include the Windows operating system, installed applications, system and app configurations, settings and local user files. By default, restore points are captured every 24 hours, retained for up to 72 hours and limited to 2 percent of disk usage, though some settings can be changed on Enterprise systems.
Microsoft said the feature is intended to help users "recover in minutes instead of hours," particularly in cases where a system change causes instability.
The feature is distinct from the older System Restore capability, even though both use Volume Shadow Copy Service under the hood. Microsoft said point-in-time restore is more comprehensive because it can include user files, is built into Windows Settings, uses stricter retention and cleanup policies, and is designed for modern device management.
Since public preview, Microsoft said point-in-time restore has been enabled on more than 2 million devices. The GA release adds availability for consumer and commercial editions, configuration service providers for remote configuration, integration with reserved storage, restore point visibility, disk usage reporting and updated documentation.
The default behavior will vary depending on the type of device. Microsoft said point-in-time restore is on by default for Windows Home devices and unmanaged Windows Pro devices, assuming the OS volume is at least 200 GB. It is off by default, at least until Windows 11 version 26H2, for Windows Enterprise and Education devices, as well as domain-joined or organization-managed Windows Pro systems.
Restores currently must be started locally from the Windows Recovery Environment. Microsoft said users can go to Troubleshoot, select Point-in-time restore, enter the BitLocker recovery key if needed, choose a restore point and confirm the restore. The company also warned that changes made after the selected restore point, including files, apps and settings, will be lost.
Microsoft said it plans to add remote initiation later through Intune recovery, which would give organizations a more scalable way to restore affected devices during broader incidents.
The announcement comes as Microsoft is also preparing IT teams for Windows 11 version 26H2, the next annual feature update. Microsoft said 26H2 continues its focus on a "predictable, low-disruption update experience" for organizations and IT professionals.
Windows 11 version 26H2 will use the same platform and servicing approach as recent Windows 11 releases. For devices running Windows 11 versions 24H2 or 25H2, Microsoft said the move to 26H2 will be delivered as a "small enablement package" rather than a full OS replacement.
The release is available now for testing through the Windows Insider Program’s Experimental channel. Microsoft said general availability is planned for the second half of 2026, with organizations encouraged to validate apps, policies and infrastructure ahead of rollout.
There is one notable exception: Devices running Windows 11 version 26H1 will not be able to update directly to 26H2 because 26H1 is based on a different Windows core. Microsoft said those systems will instead have a path to a future Windows release.