F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Secure Boot and Windows 11 compatibility

Secure Boot and Windows 11 compatibility

Secure Boot and Windows 11 compatibility

S
simooom
Member
54
08-23-2021, 01:10 AM
#1
I activated TPM, my i5-9600k works with all specs except the system health warning says secure boot isn't turned on, though BIOS shows it is. I need to switch to Windows 11 soon before buying a new machine, so I plan to move my key now instead of installing Windows 10 first then updating.
S
simooom
08-23-2021, 01:10 AM #1

I activated TPM, my i5-9600k works with all specs except the system health warning says secure boot isn't turned on, though BIOS shows it is. I need to switch to Windows 11 soon before buying a new machine, so I plan to move my key now instead of installing Windows 10 first then updating.

S
Ssillencee
Junior Member
8
08-23-2021, 05:57 PM
#2
Secure Boot isn't mandatory for Windows 11 to function; your system only needs to support it. Although upgrading from Windows 10 to Windows 11 requires the PC to have Secure Boot enabled via UEFI/BIOS, you can still opt to turn it on for enhanced protection. I'm using a dual boot configuration with my ThinkPad P50 running both Windows 11 and Linux (Mint), keeping Secure Boot disabled while Windows 11 starts without issues.
S
Ssillencee
08-23-2021, 05:57 PM #2

Secure Boot isn't mandatory for Windows 11 to function; your system only needs to support it. Although upgrading from Windows 10 to Windows 11 requires the PC to have Secure Boot enabled via UEFI/BIOS, you can still opt to turn it on for enhanced protection. I'm using a dual boot configuration with my ThinkPad P50 running both Windows 11 and Linux (Mint), keeping Secure Boot disabled while Windows 11 starts without issues.

P
PantherClaw19
Member
149
08-25-2021, 06:48 PM
#3
TLDR: Boot order control varies by BIOS version—modern setups use drag-and-drop while older ones require manual lists. Ensure Legacy mode isn’t active if you want UEFI support. Check documentation for guidance.
P
PantherClaw19
08-25-2021, 06:48 PM #3

TLDR: Boot order control varies by BIOS version—modern setups use drag-and-drop while older ones require manual lists. Ensure Legacy mode isn’t active if you want UEFI support. Check documentation for guidance.

S
sogoodf
Member
66
08-29-2021, 03:56 PM
#4
Thanks! I'll attempt it once I'm back home, I hope it functions.
S
sogoodf
08-29-2021, 03:56 PM #4

Thanks! I'll attempt it once I'm back home, I hope it functions.