- Support Window: Microsoft is extending consumer Windows 10 Extended Security Updates for eligible personal devices through October 12, 2027.
- Security Scope: ESU provides security patches after normal support, not new Windows 10 features or general technical support.
- Upgrade Barrier: Hardware requirements, replacement costs, and user resistance still leave some Windows 10 PCs outside Windows 11.
- User Choice: Households can enroll eligible devices, replace hardware, or test non-Windows alternatives before the cutoff.
Microsoft will keep consumer Extended Security Updates (ESU) available through October 12, 2027 for eligible personal devices running Windows 10 version 22H2 after historical ESU-access pressure coming from Europe. Security patches continue for qualifying PCs, but new features and general technical support do not return.
As historical context, the operating system lost normal support already in October 2025. But device-obsolescence concerns and warnings that deadlines could retire usable PCs early kept device longevity in a broader policy debate since then.
Microsoft presents the extended personal-device ESU coverage as a transition time.
Beyond Microsoft’s lifecycle calendar, many working systems can still handle daily tasks even when Windows 11 requirements block a clean Microsoft-approved upgrade.
StatCounter’s May 2026 desktop version-share data put Windows 11 at 71.69 percent and version 10 at 26.36 percent of worldwide desktop operating-system version share.
Source: StatCounter Global Stats – Windows Version Market Share
What the Extra Year Covers
ESU provides security patches after normal support, not a second life for Windows 10 as a fully maintained operating system. Microsoft’s lifecycle page identifies Windows 10 version 22H2 as the final Windows 10 release.
Microsoft previously tied ESU to a broader move toward newer PCs, Copilot+ PCs, and Windows 365. Current consumer coverage stays active for one more year, but Windows 10 remains outside normal feature development.
Eligible users can enroll through Windows Update by syncing PC settings at no additional cost, redeeming Microsoft Rewards points or a $30 purchase, or using existing account-linked ESU licensing. Earlier, consumers could get free post-deadline Windows 10 updates through account-linked enrollment, so Microsoft account linkage remains central to extend update support.
Microsoft’s consumer terms cover up to 10 eligible devices. Managed device categories remain outside the consumer path, including kiosk devices, Active Directory domain-joined systems, Microsoft Entra-joined devices, and PCs managed through Mobile Device Management.
Why Windows 11 Still Faces Resistance
Hardware remains a concrete upgrade barrier for many users. Windows 11’s TPM and processor-generation requirements, including Trusted Platform Module 2.0 as a hardware security requirement, can leave otherwise working Windows 10 PCs without an official upgrade route. This also includes older Surface devices barred from Windows 11.
Some users have already chosen running an unsupported Windows 10 over switching to Windows 11. Google’s ChromeOS Flex kit for old Windows 10 PCs also shows how rivals are trying to convert the same upgrade hesitation into alternative-OS adoption.
ESU can be a low-friction way to keep a working PC patched while a household tests software compatibility, plans a new purchase, or decides whether staying outside Windows is practical. The extra time improves near-term security while preserving part of the Windows 10 installed base that Microsoft wants to retire.
Alternatives, Policy Pressure, and What Comes Next
Alternative operating-system campaigns are using the same migration pressure. End of 10 for example promotes an up-to-date Linux operating system as a route for keeping older Windows 10 PCs in service when they cannot officially upgrade to Windows 11.
They argue that many computers bought after 2010 should not be discarded solely because Windows 10 support changes.
When the ESU endpoint arrives, affected users will face a sharper cutoff: enroll eligible devices, replace or upgrade hardware, or move to another operating system before security patches end again.


