Internet Explorer 11 desktop app retirement FAQ
Published May 19 2021 08:55 AM 3.2M Views
Microsoft

ie-to-edge_header.PNG

Update:
The retired, out-of-support Internet Explorer 11 desktop application has been permanently disabled through a Microsoft Edge update on certain versions of Windows 10.
Based on customer feedback, organizations will maintain control over when to remove IE11 UI elements from their devices.
Over the coming months a small subset of exceptional scenarios where IE11 is still accessible will be redirected to Edge, ensuring users access a supported and more secure Microsoft browser.

Editor's note: Questions in this FAQ will be added and/or updated over time to provide more detail. Updated/new questions are indicated below. Last updated: May 18, 2023.


The future of Internet Explorer ("IE") on Windows 10 is in Microsoft Edge. What does this mean for commercial organizations, IT admins, developers, and end users? Microsoft Edge brings you a faster, more secure, and more modern web experience than Internet Explorer. Also, Microsoft Edge with Internet Explorer mode ("IE mode"), is the only browser with built-in compatibility for legacy IE-based sites and apps.

As announced today, Microsoft Edge with IE mode is officially replacing the Internet Explorer 11 desktop application on Windows 10. As a result, the Internet Explorer 11 desktop application will go out of support and be retired on June 15, 2022 for certain versions of Windows 10.

Jump to: General information | How to prepare | Experience after retirement | Support and resources | Technical details


General information

When was the IE11 desktop application permanently disabled? (Updated:May 18, 2023)
The out-of-support Internet Explorer 11 (IE11) desktop application was permanently disabled on certain versions of Windows 10 on February 14, 2023 through a Microsoft Edge update. Note, this update will be rolled out over the span of a few days up to a week, as is standard for Microsoft Edge updates.

All remaining consumer and commercial devices that were not already redirected from IE11 to Microsoft Edge were redirected with the Microsoft Edge update. Users will be unable to reverse the change. Additionally, redirection from IE11 to Microsoft Edge will be included as part of all future Microsoft Edge updates.

Based on customer feedback, organizations will maintain control over determining the timing to remove IE11 UI elements from their devices, if they have not already done so. Note: IT teams can remove IE11 visual references on Windows 10 devices by using the Disable IE policy.

Additionally, over the coming months a small subset of exceptional scenarios where IE11 is still accessible will be redirected to Edge, ensuring users access a supported and more secure Microsoft browser. Details will be available in the Windows and Microsoft Edge release notes.

What can I do if my organization has been disrupted by the permanent disablement of the IE desktop application?

(Updated: February 14, 2023)

If you are experiencing issues related to IE disablement or with using Microsoft Edge with IE mode, please reach out to Microsoft as soon as possible through one of the following paths:

On which versions of Windows 10 is the IE11 desktop application out-of-support (and were impacted by IE11 disablement)? (Updated: February 14, 2023)

(In scope) The IE11 desktop application is retired and out-of-support, and has been permanently disabled on these versions of Windows 10:

  • Internet Explorer 11 desktop application delivered via the Semi-Annual Channel (SAC):
    • Windows 10 client SKUs
    • Windows 10 IoT
    • Windows 10 Enterprise Multi-Session

(Out of scope) The IE11 desktop application remain in-support on these versions of Windows 10:

  • Internet Explorer 11 desktop application on:
    • Windows 8.1 (note: Microsoft Edge version 109 will be the last supported version on Window 8.1 - learn more)
    • Windows 7 Extended Security Updates (ESU) (note: Microsoft Edge version 109 will be the last supported version on Windows 7 - learn more)
    • Windows Server SAC (all versions)
    • Windows 10 IoT Long-Term Servicing Channel (LTSC) (all versions)
    • Windows Server LTSC (all versions)
    • Windows 10 client LTSC (all versions)
    • Windows 10 China Government Edition

The following also remain in-support:

  • Internet Explorer mode in Microsoft Edge
  • Internet Explorer platform (MSHTML/Trident), including WebOC and COM automation

What about Windows 10 LTSC and Windows Server? (Updated: November 19, 2021)
In-market Windows 10 LTSC and Windows Server are out of scope (unaffected) for this change. Windows Server 2022 and Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2021 are also out of scope.

Should I just uninstall Internet Explorer completely? (Updated: December 16, 2022)
No. Internet Explorer (IE) mode relies on Internet Explorer 11 (IE11) to function. Uninstalling or removing IE11 will cause IE mode to no longer work.

Is the Internet Explorer 11 desktop application available on Windows 11? (Updated: April 14, 2022)
No, the Internet Explorer 11 desktop application is not available on Windows 11. Microsoft Edge is the default browser for Windows 11. The MSHTML engine exists as part of the Windows 11 operating system to power IE mode in Microsoft Edge. If your organization has legacy browser dependencies, you'll need to set up IE mode in Microsoft Edge before upgrading to Windows 11 to avoid business disruption. Learn more on our Internet Explorer mode webpage and read the Getting Started guide.

What does this announcement mean for my organization? (Updated: February 14, 2023)
The retired, out-of-support Internet Explorer 11 desktop application has been permanently disabled through a Microsoft Edge update on certain versions of Windows 10 and will redirect to Microsoft Edge if a user tries to access it.

You may be concerned about change management, so please check out the Internet Explorer Retirement Adoption Kit for ready-made content to help you notify users and leaders in your organization about the changes and help move them to Microsoft Edge.

What if Microsoft Edge is already installed?
Great! You already have a faster, more secure, and more modern browser than Internet Explorer and have completed some of the steps to help with your migration. If you're an organization, the next steps will be to determine if your organization has legacy browser dependencies. To enable legacy browser support in Microsoft Edge, you'll need to set up Internet Explorer mode. Learn more on our Internet Explorer mode webpage and read the Getting Started guide.

How long will IE mode be supported? (Updated: November 8, 2022)
Support for IE mode follows the lifecycle of current and future Windows client, Windows server, and Windows IoT releases (including Windows 11) at least through 2029. Additionally, Microsoft will give one year of notice before retiring the IE mode experience when the time comes. Windows support dates are documented on the Product Lifecycle page. Some editions of Windows may require an ESU license, if available, to receive operating system security updates beyond end of support dates.

If support for a version of Windows ends before 2029, support for IE mode on that version of Windows ends as well. To continue using IE mode, please migrate to a supported version of Windows.

What does this announcement mean for developers? (Updated: November 19, 2021)
Websites developed for IE should work in Microsoft Edge through IE mode. If you encounter an issue, contact App Assure for remediation assistance (ACHELP@microsoft.com).

For developers working on modern websites or applications, we understand that it has been increasingly difficult to support Internet Explorer side-by-side with modern browsers. While this announcement will start the transition of moving users from Internet Explorer to the more modern Microsoft Edge browser, it will take time and we recommend that you develop a plan to end support for Internet Explorer. Read this Moving users to Microsoft Edge from Internet Explorer article to learn how we can help.

What does this announcement mean for end users? (Updated: February 14, 2023)
With a growing number of websites no longer supporting Internet Explorer, Microsoft Edge offers a faster, more secure, and more modern browsing experience that can still open legacy, Internet Explorer-dependent sites when needed.

The retired, out-of-support Internet Explorer 11 desktop application has been permanently disabled through a Microsoft Edge update on certain versions of Windows 10 and will redirect to Microsoft Edge if a user tries to access it.

Where can I find more information on the upcoming changes that will address exceptional scenarios where IE is still available? (New: May 18, 2023)
Details will be available in the Windows and Microsoft Edge release notes.


How to prepare

I don't want to wait for my devices to be redirected by Microsoft Edge; instead, I'd like to control redirection for all my devices. What can I do today? (Updated: December 16, 2022)
The most important action you can take to prepare for February 14, 2023, is to ensure that Microsoft Edge with IE mode is set up within your organization and that you've eliminated any dependencies on the IE11 desktop application. If you would like to permanently disable the IE11 desktop application today instead of waiting for the Microsoft Edge update scheduled for February 14, 2023, you can use the Disable IE Policy.

How can I be sure I have all my sites on my IE mode site list and that everything is set up properly? (New: July 28, 2022)
Once you've set up IE mode for your organization, the best way for you to understand if there are any potential gaps in your IE mode site list is to test IE mode with your users as they work normally. This is the process followed by our customers who have already successfully transitioned from IE to Microsoft Edge with IE mode.

We recommend instructing a subset of users to test Microsoft Edge with IE mode as they work and providing them with a tool to give you feedback if they encounter any issues. Once you've worked through any issues, deploy the Disable IE Policy to permanently disable IE for those users. After, you can gradually test IE mode and push the Disable IE Policy to more devices using the same methodology until all your users are transitioned off IE.

How do I set up Internet Explorer mode in my organization?
You can get detailed guidance on how to set up Internet Explorer mode through our Getting Started guide or by visiting our IE mode documentation.

Are there any guided experiences available to help me deploy Microsoft Edge and configure IE mode? (New: June 29, 2021)
Yes, we have two guided experiences available in the Microsoft 365 admin center to help you deploy Microsoft Edge and configure IE mode.

How can I automate IE mode testing in Microsoft Edge? (New: February 22, 2022)
With IE11 retirement fast approaching, Microsoft has collaborated with Selenium to extend end-to-end IE Driver testing to include IE mode in Microsoft Edge. You can now take the same tests you've invested in and used for site testing across versions of IE and apply them for testing in IE mode. Running automated testing, combined with testing through a pilot group of users, can catch issues early and can help make sure you're ready for IE retirement.

For more information about how IE Driver can be used for IE mode testing, see Use Internet Explorer Driver to automate IE mode in Microsoft Edge.

Could I skip monthly cumulative security Windows Updates to keep using IE11? (Updated: February 14, 2023)
We do not recommend avoiding or skipping Microsoft Edge updates to keep IE11. Security updates and servicing updates are only available on the latest Stable and Beta channel releases. If you use older releases of Microsoft Edge, it's likely that you'll miss the latest quality and security updates. For more information, see Microsoft Edge Lifecycle.


Experience after retirement

When will the IE11 desktop application be permanently disabled? (Updated: May 18, 2023)
The retired, out-of-support Internet Explorer 11 desktop application has been permanently disabled through a Microsoft Edge update on certain versions of Windows 10.

Users will see a dialogue box when they are transitioned to Microsoft Edge (see below). When they try to click any IE11 icons or other entry points, they will be redirected to Microsoft Edge. Their browsing data is automatically brought over to Microsoft Edge from IE11 so they can seamlessly continue browsing.

the-future-is-microsoft-edge.png

Based on customer feedback, organizations will maintain control over determining the timing to remove IE11 UI elements from their devices, if they have not already done so. Note: IT teams can remove IE11 visual references on Windows 10 devices by using the Disable IE policy.

Additionally, over the coming months a small subset of exceptional scenarios where IE11 is still accessible will be redirected to Edge, ensuring users access a supported and more secure Microsoft browser. Details will be available in the Windows and Microsoft Edge release notes.

What is the user experience for redirection and disablement of IE11? (New: February 17, 2023)
To learn about the experience of a user being redirected from IE11 to Microsoft Edge, watch this video:

When will the Internet Explorer 11 desktop application retire on versions of Windows that were out of scope for the IE retirement on June 15th, 2022 (such as LTSC and Server)? (New: July 28, 2022)
Support for IE11 on out-of-scope versions of Windows will follow the lifecycle for the versions of Windows that they are on—once those versions of Windows go out of support, so will support for IE on those versions of Windows.

If my browser default isn't Internet Explorer 11, will the retirement affect my browser default?
No, this retirement will only change your browser default if your default had been set to Internet Explorer 11. If IE11 is set as your browser default, you will now have Microsoft Edge.

Will the Internet Explorer 11 desktop application be removed from devices? (Updated: June 13, 2022)
No, the IE11 desktop application will only be disabled. The IE11 desktop application will not be removed from devices, as the IE11 engine is required for IE mode to function.

Will iexplore.exe be removed from devices?
No, but if a user tries to access it, they will be unable to open IE11 and will be redirected to Microsoft Edge.

Will the Policy Setting "Disable Internet Explorer 11 as a standalone browser" continue to work after the Microsoft Edge update containing the permanent disablement of IE11 on February 14, 2023? (Updated: May 18, 2023)
The Disable IE policy will not be impacted by the February 14, 2023 Microsoft Edge update. It will continue to work and will remove IE visual references.


Support and resources

Where can I read all the blogs in IE to Edge series? (New: May 25, 2022)
You can read all the blogs written for the IE to Edge blog series at https://aka.ms/IEtoEdge.

Are there any changes to the Microsoft Edge lifecycle?
There are no changes to the Microsoft Edge lifecycle. Microsoft Edge continues to be supported. For more details, please visit the Microsoft Edge Lifecycle page.

What if some of my sites don't work in Microsoft Edge using Internet Explorer mode? How do I get help for website compatibility issues?
If you're an organization and experience compatibility issues such as an error loading a site, please connect with the App Assure team for remediation assistance. You can submit a request for assistance through their website or reach out via email (ACHELP@microsoft.com).

If you're a consumer at home and encounter an error loading a page, try loading it in IE mode by following the instructions in this Internet Explorer mode in Microsoft Edge support article. If the issue persists, please notify us by sending feedback through the in-product feedback tool found in the three-dot settings menu under 'Help and feedback' or by using the shortcut Alt + Shift + I. When submitting feedback, please check the box to 'Send diagnostic data'.

Where can I see a roadmap of upcoming Microsoft Edge features, including those related to IE mode? (New: June 29, 2021)
You can find the Microsoft Edge roadmap as part of the Microsoft 365 roadmap.

Where can I get help with common issues when setting up Microsoft Edge or Internet Explorer mode? Is there a Troubleshooting Guide? (New: February 22, 2022)
If you encounter an issue when setting up IE mode, you can reference this Troubleshooting Guide. It provides troubleshooting tips for common issues (like using incorrect Doc modes and not setting neutral sites) in addition to more general IE mode FAQs.

Supporting IE mode through at least 2029 is not long enough. Can I get an extension?
IE mode will continue to be supported through at least 2029 and Microsoft will give one year notice before deprecating the IE mode experience in-market when the time comes.

The new Cloud Site List Management experience will enable IT to store site lists in an authenticated endpoint in the cloud instead of requiring on-premises infrastructure to host it. You can create, import, and export site lists, as well as audit changes to site list entries through the Microsoft 365 admin center. Multiple site lists can be published to the cloud and group policy can be used to assign different groups of devices to use different lists.


Technical details

What is the MSHTML (Trident) engine? How does that relate to IE mode? And what about WebOC? Or the MSHTA app?
The MSHTML (Trident) engine is the underlying platform for Internet Explorer 11. This is the same engine used by IE mode and it will continue to be supported (in other words, unaffected by this announcement). Both WebOC and the MSHTA app will continue to be supported as they rely on the MSHTML engine which is unaffected by this announcement. If you have a custom or third-party app that relies on the MSHTML platform, you can expect it to continue to work. For future app development, we recommend using WebView2.

I ran into issues with my application which utilizes IE through automation. Will this be fixed? (Updated: May 25, 2022)
As part of the IE 11 application retirement, certain COM automation scenarios were inadvertently broken. These IE COM objects have been restored to their original functionality as of the Windows 11 November 2021 non-security preview release and the Windows 10 February 2022 monthly security update release (for versions 1809 and later). The COM scenarios will also continue to work after the IE11 desktop application is disabled after June 15, 2022. If you continue to experience issues after taking the update, please contact App Assure for remediation assistance.

What IE functionality is available in IE mode? Will Active X controls like Java and Silverlight be supported? (Updated: June 3, 2021)
IE mode supports all document and enterprise modes, Active X controls (such as Java or Silverlight), and more. For a list of what is supported and what is not supported, see the What is Internet Explorer (IE) mode Docs page.

As previously announced, Silverlight support ends on October 12, 2021. Please see the Silverlight End of Support article for more details.

Will the IE Group Policies work in IE mode?
We are committed to have IE Group Policies work in IE mode. If for any reason you encounter an issue, please connect with us at AppAssure for assistance. You can submit a request for assistance through their website or reach out via email (ACHELP@microsoft.com).

Can I host my site list in the cloud? What is the Cloud Site List Management experience for IE mode? (New: November 19, 2021)
Yes, the Cloud Site List Management experience is now available as a Public Preview within the Microsoft 365 admin center.

.mht and .mhtml files open in Internet Explorer 11 and not in Microsoft Edge. How will I be able to open those? (New: June 29, 2021)
.mht and .mhtml file support in Microsoft Edge and IE mode is planned for Microsoft Edge version 92. Please see the Microsoft 365 roadmap entry for more details. Please note that for these files to open in IE mode, IE11 must be set as the default handler for this file type.

Since IE binaries are required for IE mode and will remain on the OS, will they continue to receive security updates? (New: February 22, 2022)
Yes, since IE mode leverages IE binaries, those IE binaries will continue to receive security updates through at least 2029 even after the IE11 desktop application retires and goes out of support on June 15, 2022, on certain versions of Windows 10. Security vulnerabilities that meet MSRC guidelines will continue to be patched just as it does today.

Can cookies share session information between Microsoft Edge (Chromium-based) and IE mode (MSHTML-based) sessions? (Updated: June 13, 2022)
Yes! Previously, session-cookies in IE mode passed session information from sites using the modern engine to sites using the legacy engine, but the same couldn't be said for the reverse. To address this issue, Microsoft Edge with IE mode now allows you to manually set session-cookies to share in both directions—from modern to legacy and vice versa—to create a better experience for your users and to support using a mix of modern and legacy sites as part of your gradual modernization efforts (Windows March 2022 3B update or later and Microsoft Edge version 99 or later, required).

Please note, that persistent-cookies, which have been created with an Expires-attribute, cannot be shared between Microsoft Edge and Internet Explorer.

 

258 Comments
Copper Contributor

After creating and configuring the Enterprise Mode Site List and GPO, our intranet webpage is now working properly in Edge IE Mode, but I can no longer zoom (Ctrl + Ctrl -) the webpage.

If I use the manually configured IE mode in Edge (30 days) the zooming of the website works.

Any ideas what could be causing this?

Copper Contributor

@Eric_VanAelstyn 

Good Afternoon,

My company utilizes AppV to bundle IE, along with Java versions 6 and 7, in order to access some of our custom applications.  We've found that Edge/Java8 work with most of the non-Java applications (in IE Mode) but the million dollar question for us is, after the IE EOL date, will the IE engine remain encapsulated in our Appv "bubble" and continue to function?

 

Thank You

@Paintballerghost 


The best way to find out is to test it.  There is a GPO setting that you can put in place today to replicate the behavior after IE is disabled.  The GPO is Computer Configuration >> Policies >> Administrative Templates >> Internet Explorer >> "Disable Internet Explorer as a Standalone Browser.".  Enable that setting and you'll be able to confirm that this will still work.

Thanks! 

@Elizabeth_Greene  @Paintballerghost from my findings enabling the GPO + using Edge IE mode do not conflict. You may not uninstall / remove the IE (mode) optional feature - maybe in future you can. It is not final what will happen to the binaries.

Copper Contributor

@vpat1969 Even I've observed a few cases when everything works properly with a local Edge site list (30 days) but not with an Enterprise Mode Site list (xml file), and we're not sure what setting is missing. :sad: I really want to know how local Edge site list (30 days) is different from Enterprise Mode Site list (xml file).

Iron Contributor

Has it be confirmed that the June MS monthly updates are actually disabling IE11? Looking here I don't see it explicitly mentioned. 

Microsoft

Hi @Eric_VanAelstyn ,
Will win10 pro 20H2 stop using IE11 after 2022/6/15?

Copper Contributor

Will this be an "optional" update that is eventually mandatory as it was for Microsoft's approach to Flash?  Something else?   

 

It would be nice to know exactly what methodology will be used to disable IE.    Initially this FAQ gave the impression it would be a "Big Bang" approach through a Windows Update (so it was easy to assume this would part of the June CU).   Back in April the verbiage here changed to say "progressively redirected to Microsoft Edge over the following months, and ultimately disabled via Windows Update".   

 

My organization is well poised to support this because we have been using IE Mode for several years, implemented the "Send all sites not included in the Enterprise Mode Site List to Microsoft Edge" policy about a year ago, tested our most critical applications with the "Disable Internet Explorer Policy" enabled, and even implemented that setting for about %15 of our endpoints.  We had hoped to have it implemented on %100 of endpoints before June 15 but for other reasons this did not pan out.  So at this point it is just about making sure our Helpdesk and Management teams are educated on the mechanics and timing.   

 

 

Copper Contributor

Thank ALL Ladies and Gentlemen at Microsoft Tech Community, for ALWAYS helping me out!

 

In recent few weeks, I have found that my bank ICBC Beijing, China’s website has updated to allow me to use Edge to log in to internet banking, rather than to switch to IE.

 

After I had contacted Microsoft Tech Community about the IE online banking problem, I also contacted ICBC through its website, about forcing me to use IE for internet banking. I informed ICBC’s tech-support team about IE’s retirement in June. Then ICBC worked to update its website to allow Edge for online banking.

 

I very much appreciate your introducing to me the temporary link to switch to IE for my online banking, through this transition period, before ICBC bank has updated its website ready for Edge online banking.

 

I am proud to have used Microsoft products for over 20 years. I hope I can have the honor to keep using Microsoft products, and receive Microsoft’s powerful support worldwide in the future.

 

I wish BEST of SUCCESS for Microsoft!

 

Lydia Zhang from Beijing, China

Iron Contributor

I logged a case to MS premier support asking them the following:

- Will the June 2022 Monthly updates disable IE11 If not when will the update that disabled IE11 be released and will these be part of the standard cumulative updates

- The response I got was that they had no dates. I have escalated via our account manager. 

 

PS: I'm a big supported of MS, always have been. I love M365, Windows 10 and do a lot of Dev work in WSL/W10. That said, I really feel this ambiguity around when exactly IE11 will be disabled is doing harm to the relationship between enterprises and MS. I don't understand why this is so opaque at this stage. 

 

Copper Contributor

@Eric_VanAelstyn  Hi,I am confused how can I know if my IE desktop application was delivered via the Semi-Annual Channel (SAC), and it is mentioned that Windows 10 client SKUs (version 20H2 and later) is in scope, then what about the version before 20H2,what will happen to IE after 6/15?

Iron Contributor

I logged a support ticket with MS via our Enterprise account on when/how IE11 would be disabled and this is their response:

 

Q1: Will the Jun Monthly updates for Windows 10 SAC disable IE11?

Support Answer: No. 

 

Q2: Will IE11 be disabled via a monthly update or some other means?

Support Answer: Yes via a future update yet to be released. The date is not confirmed nor if this will be a monthly standard update or another update

 

Q3: Will this update be available via WSUS?

Support Answer: Yes

 

Q4: So if we choose not to approve this future update will IE11 remain enabled?

Support Answer: Yes but this is not recommend from MS as it is a security risk

 

 

 

 

Copper Contributor

What about Windows Server 2016 (1607) - has Microsoft stated anything affirmatively regarding the status of IE EOL of that platform? I believe it should be unaffected by the June 15, 2022 since it's LTSC, but we can find nothing that explicitly states such for that version.

 

Can someone confirm Server 1607 is NOT in scope for the IE June 15 EOL date?

 

 

@GArnold9885 The IE 11 desktop app retirement only impacts Windows 10 Semi-Annual Releases.  Windows Server 2016 and 2019 are not affected by this change.

Thanks! 

Microsoft

Hi 

In the communication regarding IE retirement it's mentionned :

" the IE desktop application will be progressively redirected to Microsoft Edge over the following months, and will ultimately be permanently disabled via a future Windows Update, to help ensure a smooth retirement."

 

Can you please elaborate ? What does "progressively" means ? Customer is still troubleshooting dependencies to IE for critical applications and for sure will not finished for June 15th. 

Any update on the calendar would be appreciated .

 

Copper Contributor

What mechanism of redirection phase? Jun Monthly updates for Windows 10?

Iron Contributor

I queried this with our enterprise CSM this morning:

 

IE will be retired in two phases to ensure a quality driven retirement. During the first phase, the redirection phase, devices will be progressively redirected from IE to Microsoft Edge over the next few months after June 15, 2022. Following industry best practices, this progressive redirection will be quality-driven to ensure a smooth IE11 retirement for you and your organization. To minimize the level of potential business disruption within an organization at one time, not all devices will be redirected at the same time. This approach is designed so that you can quickly identify and resolve any potential issues, such as missed sites, before all devices within your organization are redirected. The intent is for the redirection phase for all devices with Windows platforms that are in-scope for IE retirement to be complete in the next few months.

 

 The terminology of 'progressively redirected' is very ambiguous.:

Q1: is this something already in IE11/Windows 10 SAC or something introduced by the June updates?

Q2: How does this manifest itself? Will it apply to internet sites, intranet sites and sites on the enterprise mode site list for IE11? Its very vague terminology! 

 

Again, this vagueness and ambiguity is hurting Microsofts  reputation in the IE team in my opinion and it's needless. 

Microsoft

Hi @shocko ,

 

Let me see if I can help answer some of your questions:

A1: The progressive redirection of devices during that initial phase will not happen due to a Windows Update. At this time, we are not going into details on the exact mechanism other than that during this phase it will not be cause by a Windows Update meaning customers should not plan to skip Windows Updates to avoid it. Doing so presents a security risk and would be ineffective in preventing the redirection.

 

A2: When a device is redirected, the user will get a redirection message if they try to open IE and will instead be redirected to Microsoft Edge. When in Microsoft Edge with IE mode set up, any sites on the org's enterprise site list will open in IE mode while all sites on not the enterprise site list will use the modern engine. Organizations should prepare for this by setting up IE mode in Microsoft Edge as soon as possible if they have not done so already.

 

Here is the full response for that experience:

 

During the redirection phase, users will experience the following:

  • When a user tries to open IE11, they will see a message informing them that they are being redirected to Microsoft Edge. Clicking “Continue” will launch Microsoft Edge. This is an example of a message a user might see:

    Eric_VanAelstyn_0-1655241835163.png

     

  • The IE11 icon will remain in the Start Menu, and on the taskbar and desktop (if present), but clicking on any will redirect to Microsoft Edge.
  • When users try to launch shortcuts or file associations that use IE11, they will be redirected to open the same file/URL in Microsoft Edge.
  • When users try to launch IE11 by directly invoking the iexplore.exe binary, Microsoft Edge will launch instead.
Microsoft

Hi @jangga5831,

The progressive redirection of devices during that initial phase will not happen due to a Windows Update. At this time, we are not going into details on the exact mechanism other than that during this phase it will not be caused by a Windows Update, meaning customers should not plan to skip Windows Updates to avoid it. Doing so presents a security risk and would be ineffective in preventing the redirection.

Copper Contributor

Why not going into details on the exact mechanism?

Copper Contributor

Is Microsoft Edge Update a redirection phase Mechanism?

Silver Contributor

I think redirection mechanism is via Edge update as this already started happening for some companies weeks ago. If i remember correctly after Edge updated to 92. Maybe this was a mistake or an early test. I think it is most probably already in your Edge browser. Unless you somehow manage to rollback to a month or more older version. Which of course will make you vulnerable to a bunch of critical and widely exploited vulnerabilities.

Silver Contributor

@Eric_VanAelstyn i suppose it will also redirect to Edge for pages that are using Enterprise mode, but inside IE? I mean they set IE mode say to IE8 Enterprise Mode, so it opens a page inside IE with that mode and shows icon with buildings in the addressbar. I haven't used this option for years, so, maybe it works fine in Edge too. A while ago we had to do this as old SharePoint 2010 site was not working fine in IE11 without this setting for IE8.

Copper Contributor

I guess IT missed this update/important information, but what about the (old) MS CRM Dynamics Plugin for Outlook how do I get this to work again?
We are already running IE Mode for the old MS CRM 2016 web server and that is working fine in Edge and I have the IE 11 option installed but the plugin started acting odd spawning multiple blank tabs in Edge and telling me that it can't communicate with the CRM server. How do I fix this thanks? I assume Microsoft has a solution for their own software?

Microsoft

Hi @Bjørn . 

Sorry to hear you are running into this issue! After some exploration, I was unfortunately not able to find an answer for you. My recommendation would be for you to open a Dynamics Premier case ticket as their engineers can help you to remediate this issue. We also have the App Assure service (ACHELP@microsoft.com) that can help with compatibility issues.

 

Best,

Eric

Copper Contributor

Seems you can still launch Internet Explorer (including interface) using the following HTA script, provided the MS HyperText Application host (the rendering engine) is installed as a Windows function:

<!-- iexplore.hta - requires c:\windows\system32\mshta.exe -->
<html><head>
<meta http-equiv = "x-ua-compatible" content = "IE=11" />
</head><body><script>  
  var a = document.createElement ('a');
  a.href = 'https://www.msn.com/'; 
  a.click ();
  window.close ();
</script></body></html>

 Gerolf

Copper Contributor

I am trying to install windows 11.

Copper Contributor

@Anthony1951mentions - Installation of Windows 11 surely is off-topic in this thread, you may have to look elsewhere for a little help:

http://reboot.pro/index.php?showtopic=22541#entry218702 

But yes - as of today, I can still run Internet Explorer (including menu and address bar) on Windows 11 with the help of the little launcher script I gave above (copied to %USERPROFILE%\Desktop).

 

Gerolf

Copper Contributor

Currently have a Windows 10 user who cannot access our IE Mode internal site because:

“Internet Explorer can’t be found. You need to re-install or re-enable Internet Explorer.”

Has anyone else experienced this issue?

IE Mode had been working for months until now

@henryjs  That's unfortunate.  Can you check the PC to verify the Internet Explorer Windows Feature hasn't been removed?  I've worked with a few customers that removed it and caused this issue.

IE mode will NOT work if you remove the Internet Explorer feature from Windows.

Copper Contributor

@Elizabeth_Greene Thanks, you were right. Had to reinstall the feature using the command: 

dism /online /Add-Capability /CapabilityName:Browser.InternetExplorer~~~~0.0.11.0

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/developer/browsers/installation/disable-internet-explo...

 

Copper Contributor

Internet Explorer 11 Instaluj 2023-2030 Bartosz Wardeuga i ZSS4 To Juz Koniec

Copper Contributor

What happens to those of us who use and pay for MSN Explorer, since I unterstand an older version of IE is the backbone of MSN Explorer?

Copper Contributor

To clarify, HTML Help (hh.exe, etc.) isn't going away, right?

Copper Contributor

Hi, our winforms desktop application uses the WebBrowser control/class (from System.Windows.Forms, essentially IE).  It sounds as though this will still function, but will our users need to do anything specific on their systems (e.g. enable IE mode in Edge) after the IE11 permanent disablement in Feb 2023 for this control to still function?  Thanks.

Copper Contributor

good

 

Copper Contributor

god

Copper Contributor

"Internet Explorer 11 (IE11) desktop application is scheduled to be permanently disabled on certain versions of Windows 10 on February 14, 2023, through a Microsoft Edge update, not a Windows update as previously communicated."

 

So what will happen to Windows 10 LTSB/LTSC devices or Servers that have Microsoft Edge installed with Auto-Update enabled?

From the message, above, I understand that IE will continue to be available/enabled even after Edge (auto)updates on those systems.

Can anyone confirm the expected behavior? 

Microsoft

Hi @pdlt3 ,

Windows 10 LTSB/LTSC and Server remain out of scope for IE retirement/disablement and so will not be affected by the Microsoft Edge update. Hope that helps!

 

Copper Contributor

Hi,

 

Does it exist a method to generate a log when Internet Explorer is launched ? I search a method in a large enterprise to determine all situations where IE could still necessary. I don't want to redirect to Edge and block IE... I need to determine critical IE apps without block IE. The actual strategy offered via GPO is:

 

1- Redirect to Edge without message

2- Redirect to Edge and alert me every time

3- Redirect to Egde and alert me the first time only

 

I need to have this:

 

1- Redirect to Edge without message

2- Redirect to Edge and alert me every time

3- Redirect to Egde and alert me the first time only

4- Stay in IE and alert me every time *** (And after June 2023 this could be no more possible)

+

Log IE launch that could generate a log file or a specific Windows Event ID that could include "Date, time, URL"

 

 

Microsoft

Hi @GlennG-TM ,

 

Thanks for reaching out. Here is a helpful tool to audit IE traffic in your organization to help determine which sites will need IE mode in Edge: https://setup.microsoft.com/edge/configure-internet-explorer-mode-setup-guide This is also documented here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/deployedge/edge-ie-mode-site-discovery

 

As mentioned, the top of this FAQ, IE11 has been out of support since June 15, 2022, and will be permanently disabled through a Microsoft Edge update on certain versions of Windows 10 on February 14, 2023.

If you need further help transitioning from IE to Microsoft Edge, please feel free to reach out to customer support using the following steps:

  • Visit: https://support.serviceshub.microsoft.com/supportforbusiness
  • Click "sign in”
  • Click “continue” when prompted,
  • Confirm contact information details
  • Click “Open a product support request”
  • Under product family select “browser”
  • Under product or service select “Internet Explorer”
  • Under “product version” select “Internet Explorer 11 on Other Operating System”
  • Under which category best describes the issue select “product lifecycle or “supportability clarifications”
Copper Contributor

Hello and thanks for the informative blog.

 

One Question @Eric_VanAelstyn 

Will the Policy Setting "Disable Internet Explorer 11 as a standalone browser" still have an effect if it is "Disabled" (for some Users / technical Accounts) after permanent IE11 deactivation by the MS Edge update on February 14, 2023??

Copper Contributor

Good question. Waiting to see good reply or clarification on this. 

Copper Contributor

..............

Copper Contributor

................

Copper Contributor

Is it planned to expose a portable version of Internet Explorer?

As we still need to develop Silverlight apps (I know it's deprecated), Edge with IE mode doesn't allow to properly debug the web Silverlight app in Visual Studio debug mode. So we'll not be able to develop the application anymore.

Iron Contributor

What do we do if Canary and Dev versions of Edge start breaking compatibility?  Right now I have to switch to Windows 11 built-in Edge from Canary to be able to use our security cameras.  On every Canary update I've been sending in feedback and recordings about the issue.  I'm fearful it's only a matter of time before it gets migrated to release and we won't be able to use the monitoring for our cameras.  I switched to IE mode back in 2021.  There's been random issues about not being able to click on some things where I've reported them and the next Canary build tends to fix the issues.  But it's been quite a few builds now since this latest issue developed and each new build puts the new garbage code closer to release.

 

It's absolutely critical that if you pull IE that IE Mode retains compatibility. 

Copper Contributor

Hi

I have a problem with a site that when you login to that site I get a popup that ask to install Applet jre (java)

this Java is install on the server and if say Cancel and then reload the page it works fine and load the java as this run the Edge in IE11 mode but as I see it when the Edge open with the link it will not open in IE11 mode and this is why I get this popup and only when I reload the page them it change the mode to IE11 and then it works 

so is there any way to open Edge in IE mode so that I will not get in to that problem ?

 

update me 

 

Tamir

 

Copper Contributor

What is the best way to stop this update?

Microsoft

@tamirt Hi Tamir, it looks like you will need some technical troubleshooting that we can't provide here. Plese follow these steps to submit your issue for more assistance.

 

  • Visit: https://support.serviceshub.microsoft.com/supportforbusiness
  • Click "sign in”
  • Click “continue” when prompted,
  • Confirm contact information details
  • Click “Open a product support request”
  • Under product family select “browser”
  • Under product or service select “Internet Explorer”
  • Under “product version” select “Internet Explorer 11 on Other Operating System”
  • Under which category best describes the issue select “product lifecycle or “supportability clarifications”
Version history
Last update:
‎Nov 09 2023 11:10 AM
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