Guide: How to Enable/Dis­able Auto­mat­ic Reboot in Win­dows 10

Many Windows users complain that they are tired of the annoyance of Windows 10 feature of the automatic restart. Actually, this version of Windows OS is peculiar: auto update and then force restart. On the one hand, it ensures that your device is up so far with the latest improvements and security patches. On the other hand, this sudden restart would cause data loss especially the loss of unsaved work. To solve this problem, many users want to find a way to stop automatic restart on Windows 10. In this Windows 10 guide, we will walk you through the handy methods to prevent Windows 10 from restarting after an update.

Why the computer reboots automatically

The most common reason behind this event is updates. Windows 10 receives many updates that often fix known errors and bugs and sometimes bring new updates features along with it. Some of these updates require Windows to shut down properly before installing. To ensure that your work is not hindered by these automatic updates and restarts, Windows comes with a schedule featureYou can use this to schedule the hours that the reboot will occur. Decently feature but only if you set it up upOtherwise, Windows will occasionally ask you to update your computer. If you don’t do it for a while, Windows will take the liberty of automatically rebooting and completing the installation of the updates. These are known as Quiet Hours and this is useful feature was released with the Anniversary Update. If you haven’t decided yet, Windows Updates are inevitable as they should be. You can postpone it, but you cannot avoid it. However, you can and should manage it. Microsoft has a profound guide about how updates work in Windows 10. It won’t help you set it up up your computer to manage updates and reboot, but it is still legible nonetheless.

How to Disable automatic reboot

Press Windows Key + I to open Settings and click Update & Security. As you can see below, there are some pending updates on my computer. Scroll a bit and you’ll find a few options. First click on Change active hours. Set a time frame based on your working hours. While working hours may change from time to time based on workload, this is what your day usually looks like. Windows can learn about your active hours based on how often and when you use your device on a daily basis. Your active hours will be adjusted accordingly. Enable that option if you wish feature switched on. I don’t use it. Go back to the previous screen and there is an option to pause downloads up up to 7 days. There is no way to stop these downloads and for the right reasons. If your schedule is super tight and you don’t have time to even think about setting active hours, pause the updates. You should now see a date that is 7 days in the future when the updates will be enabled. You can resume it at any time. Clicking Advanced options will show you even more ways to control when updates are installed and restarted. To avoid unexpected reboots, turn off the Restart this device option as soon as possible. You can further prevent updates from being downloaded and installed for up up to 35 days here. Note that you can only do it once. You need to update everything before you can postpone it again. I guess no one is that busy and you can find at least a day in a month to update your operating system? Updates are further divided into two parts: Features and safety. You can procrastinate features in front of up 365 days, but security updates cannot be delayed for more than 30 days. I don’t think security updates should be delayed for even one day unless you really have a good reason to do so. You will see a notification like the one above when updates are ready to be installed. You can choose to restart manually or leave it to the active hours settings.

Edit group policy

There is another way to disable automatic restart after updates. Press Windows Key + S and search for gpedit.msc and open it. That will open the Group Policy Editor. This should allow for an automatic restart that occurs immediately after an update has been downloaded and installed.

How to Enable/Dis­able Auto­mat­ic Reboot in Win­dows 10: benefits

Faq

Final note

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