Microsoft confirms Windows 11 26H1 will be for Arm devices only at launch — Snapdragon X2-powered devices officially shipping with 26H1
It's 24H2 all over again, but with the caveat that 26H1 will only support specific hardware for its entire lifecycle. Devices running 26H1 will not be able to upgrade to 26H2.
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Microsoft is switching gears with its update model for 2026 and is offering a first-half-of-the-year update for Windows 11 for the first time since 2021. The trillion-dollar software giant confirmed in a Windows IT Pro blog post that the newly-released Windows 11 26H1 update is designed to only support devices featuring "new silicon". Devices running Qualcomm's new Snapdragon X2 ARM SoCs are the only devices that support 26H1 for the time being.
Windows 11 26H1 isn't any ordinary update; Microsoft also revealed that 26H1 runs on a different (newer) codebase than Windows 11 25H2, codenamed Bromine. Because of this code disparity, devices running 26H1 will be stuck on that version for the foreseeable future and won't be able to upgrade to Windows 11 26H2 when it debuts later this year. However, Microsoft did confirm that 26H1 devices will have "a path to update in a future Windows release," confirming that the existing germanium builds of Windows (24H2/25H2) will likely be updated to Bromine, probably next year. Microsoft already ruled out swapping to Bromine for 26H2.
26H1's release is very similar to Windows 11 24H2, as both were and are launched to support bleeding-edge ARM devices before the mainstream Windows codebase could catch up. Windows 11 24H2 was launched in June of 2024 and strictly only worked on ARM-exclusive Copilot+ PCs until October, when Microsoft finally released the update to all systems. 26H1 is different, however, in that it appears to be strictly aimed at supporting next-generation hardware and doesn't have any noteworthy features (if any features) over 25H2.
Article continues belowThis is also the first time Microsoft has released a "major" Windows update since Windows 10 21H1 in 2021. 26H1 and 21H1 have their own similarities in that 21H1 was also a minor update that only brought a handful of updates to Windows 10.
It will be interesting to see if Microsoft will continue to split its development branches in the future strictly to stay on top of future hardware support. This is the second time Microsoft has been apparently forced to provide dedicated Windows 11 builds for specific hardware. For now, Snapdragon X2 is the only SoC that supports (and requires) 26H1, but Microsoft's wording suggests there will be more hardware soon that will need 26H1's codebase to run. Leaks, rumors, and educated guesses claim that Nvidia's upcoming N1X chip will also be strictly supported through 26H1.
For now, though, what is important to know is that Windows 11 26H1 is a device-specific update, so you won't have to worry about upgrading to it. If you already have a device that needs 26H1, it will have 26H1 out of the box. If you're on Windows 11 25H2, 24H2, or any older update, you can skip 26H1 and focus on 26H2, which will be Microsoft's "actual" feature update geared towards all mainstream Windows devices coming out in the second half of this year.
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Aaron Klotz is a contributing writer for Tom’s Hardware, covering news related to computer hardware such as CPUs, and graphics cards.
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cyrusfox Valve, might be an opportune time to get your steam desktop out and promote Steam OS. Windows has long abandon common sense...Reply -
USAFRet Reply
People that purposely go look for a Windows Update would know this.JTWrenn said:This is going to confuse the heck out of people. Call it something else.
Most people just let it happen naturally, and this update won't apply to their system. -
derekullo Reply
"9am Patch Tuesday"USAFRet said:People that purposely go look for a Windows Update would know this.
Most people just let it happen naturally, and this update won't apply to their system.
Boss: Are the computers patched yet? I heard they released 26H1 !!! Do our computers have it yet?
Tech: No boss... The patches don't get released till later today and we still have to test them to make sure they doesn't break Office again. Why don't you try out the new AI features in 26H1, here's the link.
Something like this will definitely get sent at some point. -
excalibur1814 ReplyJTWrenn said:This is going to confuse the heck out of people. Call it something else.
Not many people care outside of forums or I.T. The update arrives, or it doesn't. It's just here to probably push the new kit and the fuss will soon fade away. -
das_stig Maybe somebody at Microsoft had a brain fart, found a set of balls, suddenly spoke up and told Satya Nadella Windows 11 is a :poop: that they need to do a fork from server again and try something different and targeting a small hardware base like WOA is better than disrupting the current POS.Reply -
thesyndrome Reply
Agreed, in my mind the 2XHX updates have always been large updates for every version of Windows that come with new features or significant backend changes, I don't understand why this isn't named something like "Windows on ARM support update" if it's something that only applies to a handful of devices (which haven't really gained much traction from my understanding).JTWrenn said:This is going to confuse the heck out of people. Call it something else.
I only clicked on the article because of how the update was named, thinking that it included other features and was just being deployed to ARM devices first, but the content in the article makes it sound like any x86 Windows device isn't going to get it at all and we will instead get 26H2 later on in the year with meaningful changes?