Installing PowerToys
We recommend installing PowerToys via GitHub or Microsoft Store, but alternative install methods are also listed if you prefer using a package manager.
- Supported Operating Systems:
- Windows 11 (all versions)
- Windows 10 v2004 (19041) or newer
- System architecture
- x64 and Arm64 architectures are currently supported.
- Our installer will install the following runtimes:
- Microsoft Edge WebView2 Runtime bootstrapper (this will always install the latest version available)
To see if your machine meets these requirements, check your Windows version and build number by opening a Run dialog (Win+R), then type winver
and select OK or Enter. Alternatively, enter the ver
command in Windows Command Prompt. You may be able to update to the latest Windows version in Windows Update.
To install PowerToys using a Windows executable file:
- Visit the Microsoft PowerToys GitHub releases page.
- Select the Assets drop-down menu to display the files for the release.
- Select the
PowerToysSetup-0.##.#-x64.exe
orPowerToysSetup-0.##.#-arm64.exe
file to download the PowerToys executable installer. - Once downloaded, open the executable file and follow the installation prompts.
Install from the Microsoft Store's PowerToys page.
To install PowerToys using the Windows Package Manager, it's as simple as running the following command from the command line / PowerShell:
winget install --id Microsoft.PowerToys --source winget
PowerToys supports configuring through winget configure
using Desired State Configuration.
The installer executable accepts the Microsoft Standard Installer command-line options.
Here are some common commands you may want to use:
Command | Abbreviation | Function |
---|---|---|
/quiet | /q | Silent install |
/silent | /s | Silent install |
/passive | progress bar only install | |
/layout | create a local image of the bootstrapper | |
/log | /l | log to a specific file |
Make sure to have WiX Toolset v3 installed. The command doesn't work with WiX Toolset v4.
This PowerShell example assumes the default install location for WiX Toolset and that the PowerToys installer has been downloaded to the Windows desktop.
cd $Env:WIX\"bin"
# dark.exe -x OUTPUT_FOLDER INSTALLER_PATH
.\dark.exe -x ${Env:\USERPROFILE}"\Desktop\extractedPath" ${Env:\USERPROFILE}"\Desktop\PowerToysSetup-0.53.0-x64.exe"
If you have an issue with the MSI being inaccessible, you can download the installer that corresponds with the installed version via the PowerToys releases page and run the following command. You'll need to change EXECUTABLE_INSTALLER_NAME to the actual file name.
In PowerShell, run .\EXECUTABLE_INSTALLER_NAME.exe --extract_msi
and this will extract the MSI to your desktop.
If there are problems while uninstalling a version, there are cleanup scripts available:
- <github.com/microsoft/PowerToys/tree/main/tools/CleanUp_tool>
- <github.com/microsoft/PowerToys/tree/main/tools/CleanUp_tool_powershell_script>
These community-driven alternative install methods aren't officially supported, and the PowerToys team doesn't update or manage these packages.
To install PowerToys using Chocolatey, run the following command from your command line / PowerShell:
choco install powertoys
To upgrade PowerToys, run:
choco upgrade powertoys
If you have issues when installing/upgrading, create an issue at the maintainers GitHub repository or follow the Chocolatey triage process.
To install PowerToys using Scoop, run the following command from the command line / PowerShell:
scoop bucket add extras
scoop install powertoys
To update PowerToys using Scoop, run the following command from the command line / PowerShell:
scoop update powertoys
If you have issues when installing/updating, file an issue in the Scoop repo on GitHub.
After successfully installing PowerToys, an overview window will display with introductory guidance for each of the available utilities.
PowerToys uses an auto-updater that checks for new versions when the app is running. If enabled, a toast notification will appear when an update is available. You can also check for updates manually from the PowerToys Settings.
Microsoft PowerToys: Utilities to customize Windows
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