{"title":"How to Factory Reset Windows 11 (7 Easy Steps)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/tech/how-to-factory-reset-windows-11","category":{"slug":"tech","name":"Tech"},"creator":{"name":"SoulOfTech","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCadRSZabLYNcQFTUvqI4_Cg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIRuMV5B_Ak"},"tldr":"Factory reset Windows 11 in 7 steps. Keep your files or wipe everything, cloud download or local reinstall. Back up first - it is permanent.","totalDurationSeconds":362,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Windows 11 PC","external drive or cloud storage for backup","stable internet connection (if using cloud download)"],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Back Up Your Files Before You Touch Anything","text":"This is the most important step in the entire tutorial. A factory reset wipes everything: documents, photos, downloads, saved passwords in non-cloud browsers, installed apps, and every custom setting. There is no undo button once the reset starts.Plug in an external SSD or USB drive and drag your important folders over - Documents, Pictures, Videos, Downloads, and your Desktop at minimum. If you use OneDrive, Google Drive, or Dropbox, open the app and confirm every folder you care about shows the green checkmark or 'Up to date' status before you go any further. Cloud sync that has been paused for six months is not a backup.Also export browser bookmarks (Edge, Chrome, Firefox all have a built-in export to HTML file) and write down any software license keys you will need to reinstall after the reset."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Right-Click the Start Button and Open Settings","text":"Look at the taskbar at the bottom of your screen and find the Start button - the Windows logo icon. Right-click it (not left-click, which opens the regular Start menu).A long menu pops up with options like Installed apps, Power Options, Device Manager, and Task Manager. About two thirds of the way down you will see Settings. Click Settings and the Windows 11 Settings window opens in a new window."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Click System, Then Scroll Down to Recovery","text":"In the Settings window, look at the sidebar on the left. You will see Home at the top, then System, Bluetooth and devices, Network and internet, and so on. Click System (usually the second item from the top).The right side of the window now shows all the System sub-pages: Display, Sound, Notifications, Power and battery, Storage, and more. Scroll down past Multitasking, For developers, Activation, and Troubleshoot. About two-thirds of the way down you will see Recovery with the description 'Reset, advanced startup, go back.' Click Recovery."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Click the Reset PC Button","text":"The Recovery page shows a few options. The one you want sits under the Recovery options header and is labeled Reset this PC with the description 'Choose to keep or remove your personal files, then reinstall Windows.' On the right side of that row is a blue or grey Reset PC button.Click Reset PC. A separate prompt window opens on top of Settings and walks you through the rest of the choices. From here on, you are in the reset wizard."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Choose Keep My Files or Remove Everything","text":"The first reset prompt asks you to Choose an option. Two big buttons appear:Keep my files - removes apps and settings but preserves your personal files in Documents, Pictures, Videos, and Downloads. Use this if your PC is slow or buggy but you cannot back everything up for some reason. Apps still get wiped, so you will reinstall Chrome, Steam, Office, and the rest from scratch.Remove everything - wipes the entire drive. Apps, settings, files, accounts - all of it. Use this if you are giving the PC away, selling it, or you want a true clean install for yourself. This is the proper factory reset.Click whichever fits your situation. The wizard moves to the next screen."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Pick Cloud Download or Local Reinstall","text":"The next prompt is How would you like to reinstall Windows? You get two choices:Cloud download - downloads a fresh, current copy of Windows 11 from Microsoft's servers. Uses about 4 GB of data and needs a stable internet connection for the whole download. Best choice if your current Windows install is corrupted, full of malware, or just plain broken. The fresh copy is guaranteed clean.Local reinstall - rebuilds Windows from the recovery files already stored on your PC. Faster (no download), no internet required, and ideal if your PC is mostly healthy and you just want a fresh start. The downside: if those local files are corrupted too, the reinstall inherits the corruption.If you are unsure, pick Cloud download. Slower, but you get a guaranteed-clean copy."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Review the Summary, Hit Reset, Then Wait","text":"The wizard shows a summary screen titled Ready to reset this PC. It lists exactly what is about to happen: 'Remove all personal files and user accounts on this PC,' 'Remove any changes made to settings,' 'Remove any apps and programs that didn't come with this PC,' and 'Reinstall Windows from this device.' Read it once to make sure it matches what you actually want.Click Reset to start. From here you are committed - your PC will restart and begin wiping itself. A progress bar appears showing percentage complete. The PC will restart several times on its own. Do not unplug it, do not close the lid, do not turn it off. Plug a laptop into the charger and walk away.Total time runs 30 to 90 minutes depending on your hardware and which reset options you chose (cloud download adds time, removing everything with full drive clean adds the most). When the reset finishes, you land on the Windows 11 first-time setup screen - the same one a brand new laptop shows out of the box. Pick your region, sign in to your Microsoft account, and reinstall your apps. You are done."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T15:02:34.611Z","published":"2026-05-24T15:02:20.196Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}