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Windows IT Pro Blog
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Point-in-time restore for Windows 11 is now generally available

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Lia_Vargas
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Jun 23, 2026

When a Windows PC experiences an unexpected issue, every minute of downtime matters. Devices are constantly evolving through updates, apps, policies, drivers, and user activity, which can make recovery complex. For IT teams, getting users back to work often means time-consuming troubleshooting, or full rebuilds that take hours.

Today, we’re excited to announce the general availability of point‑in‑time restore for Windows 11 new built-in recovery capability designed to recover in minutes instead of hours, with confidence, by safely rolling a device back to a previous state. Available in Windows Enterprise, Pro and Home SKUs, point-in-time restore provides admins and employees a quick, built‑in ability to go back in time to a moment before the issue occurred.

This release marks an important step forward in Windows recovery and resilience and reflects what we’ve heard consistently from Windows users and IT admins: recovery should be reliable, simple, and easy to use when it matters most.

Point-in-time restore shown in the Troubleshoot menu for Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE)

What is point‑in‑time restore for Windows 11 PCs?

Point‑in‑time restore automatically captures comprehensive restore points on a predictable cadence and stores them locally on the device.

With point‑in‑time restore, a device can be restored to the exact system state captured earlier, including:

  • Windows OS
  • Installed applications
  • System and app configurations
  • Settings
  • Local user files

Key characteristics:

  • Automatic and predictable: Restore points are captured on a recurring schedule (default: every 24 hours), so recent recovery points are already available if an issue occurs.
  • Fast, full‑system recovery: Restore the entire system to a previous state in minutes*, minimizing user and business impact.
  • Designed for real‑world disruptions: Useful for both one‑off device issues and wider incidents affecting many machines, such as a problematic updates, driver regressions, app corruption, configuration errors or other user or admin-initiated changes that result in system instability.
  • Built into Windows 11: Configuration is available within system settings, and restore operations are initiated from Windows RE, providing a trusted recovery path even when the Windows PC won’t boot.

*Note: Restore time is dependent on several factors, such as changes that have occurred on the system since restore point capture and system performance.

Point‑in‑time restore is part of Windows resiliency, focused on helping organizations prevent, manage, and recover from PC incidents more effectively. Check out the click-through demo to see the configuration and restore experience. 

How is this different from System Restore?

You may be wondering how point‑in‑time restore compares to System Restore. While both features leverage Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) under the hood, point‑in‑time restore is more comprehensive and is built for modern Windows PCs management and recovery.

 

Point-in-time restore 

System Restore 

Restore points 

Automatic, configurable cadence; user files are included in restore point

Event-triggered or manual only; user files are excluded from restore point

Reliability 

Strict retention and cleanup policies 

No retention limits 

User experience 

Integrated in system settings 

Limited to control panel 

Storage impact 

Minimizes storage impact by integrating with reserved storage* 

Higher impact to storage space 

Management 

Will support robust remote management capabilities 

Limited remote management capabilities 

*Note: Reserved storage is a Windows feature that sets aside a portion of disk space for successful update installation. It helps ensure that updates, temporary files, and system processes can run reliably, without requiring users to free up space.

How does this feature in Windows 11 compare to point-in-time restore for Windows 365?

Some of you are already familiar with point‑in‑time restore for Windows 365 Enterprise, which protects Cloud PCs. While these features share the same goals of fast recovery and minimal downtime, they are optimized for different environments.

Each solution is purpose‑built for its environment, and organizations may use both depending on device types.

 

Windows Client 

Windows 365 

Feature enablement 

Can be enabled or disabled 

Always on 

Restore point retention 

Up to 72 hours 

Up to 1 month 

Restore point types 

Short-term only 

Short-term, long term, and manual 

Restore point sharing 

No sharing, restore points remain local 

Support sharing across Windows 365 and Azure Cloud 

Restore speed 

Likely faster due to local storage of restore point 

Speed is affected by network latency and bulk vs. single restores 

Storage constraints 

Bound by physical disk limits 

Scalable, cloud storage 

What’s included in general availability (GA)?

Since its initial public preview, point-in-time restore has been enabled on over 2M devices and the feature has continued to mature based on feedback and real‑world testing. GA signals that point‑in‑time restore is ready for production use and to become part of your Windows recovery toolkit.

Highlights in the GA release include:

  • Availability for all users on consumer and commercial editions of Windows 11
  • CSPs for remote configuration
  • Integration with system reserved storage to minimize local storage impact
  • Visibility into restore points on the system and their disk usage
  • Consistency in settings across feature updates and integration with OneSettings
  • Updated documentation and guidance
Configuring point-in-time restore

Configuration defaults for general availability are outlined below:

Configuration 

Default  

Options 

Editions eligible to configure 

Feature On/Off 

See below

On, Off 

Home, Pro, Enterprise  

Restore point frequency 

Every 24 hours  

4, 6, 12, 16, 24 hours 

Enterprise only 

Restore point retention 

72 hours 

4, 6, 12, 16, 24, 72 hours 

Enterprise only 

Maximum usage limit 

2% of disk 

Percent of disk (min 2 GB, max 50 GB equivalent)  

Home, Pro, Enterprise 

Point-in-time restore is on by default on some systems not under enterprise management:

  • Windows Home edition devices
  • Windows Pro edition devices that are not domain joined and not enrolled in enterprise endpoint management

Point-in-time restore is off by default, until Windows 11, version 26H2 on some enterprise-managed systems:

  • Windows Enterprise and Education edition devices
  • Windows Pro edition devices that are domain joined or managed by an organization

*Note: Only devices with an OS volume size of 200GB or greater, will have the feature on by default. The feature will be off by default on devices with OS volume size below 200GB, but admins can turn the feature on if desired.

Point-in-time restore can be configured in system settings: System > Recovery > Point-in-time restore. Only local admins can view or edit point-in-time restore settings on their system.

Point-in-time restore settings page in System > Recovery
Important considerations before you restore

Point‑in‑time restore is a powerful recovery tool, and it’s important to understand its behavior and impact:

  • Data loss: Any changes made after the selected restore point including files, apps, and settings will be lost. Cloud data is not affected but may require resync. Microsoft recommends storing data in the cloud.
  • Local storage: Restore points are stored locally and require sufficient disk space. Older restore points are automatically removed when limits are reached.
  • BitLocker protection: A BitLocker recovery key is required when restoring encrypted devices.

For detailed requirements, limitations, and best practices, we strongly recommend reviewing the documentation.

Restoring a device

Currently, a restore can only be triggered locally by the user when the device is in Windows RE. The steps to perform a point-in-time restore are below:

  1. In Windows RE select Troubleshoot > Point-in-time restore
  2. Enter Bitlocker recovery key
  3. Select a restore point to restore PC to the exact state it was at the time of the restore point
  4. Acknowledge the risks and limitations associated with this feature by selecting Continue
  5. Review the restore point selection, OS version and warning of data loss and select Restore to start the restore process

*Note: Microsoft has announced plans to enable remote initiation in the future, through Intune recovery, giving organizations a more scalable way to restore devices when that capability becomes available.

Start using point‑in‑time restore today and provide feedback

Point‑in‑time restore is now generally available on Windows 11 Client PCs on versions 24H2 and later.

Learn more and get started: point-in-time restore for Windows 11 Microsoft Learn.

We strongly encourage you to share feedback through Feedback Hub, within Recovery and Uninstall > Point-in-time restore as we continue investing in Windows recovery and resiliency.

Looking ahead

Point‑in‑time restore is an important foundation for the future of Windows recovery. As part of Windows resiliency, we’ll continue to enhance point-in-time restore and expand recovery options, improving manageability, and reducing the time it takes to get users back to productivity across a broad range of issues. For the latest updates on Windows, please refer to the Windows IT Pro Blog.

 


Continue the conversation. Find best practices. Bookmark the Windows Tech Community, then follow us on  LinkedIn or @MSWindowsITPro for updates. Looking for support? Visit Windows on Microsoft Q&A.

Updated Jun 22, 2026
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