[Microsoft](https://www.microsoft.com) just handed Windows users the update control they’ve demanded for years. The company quietly announced Friday that it’s rolling out a new pause feature that lets you delay Windows Updates in 35-day chunks – and critically, you can keep extending that pause as many times as you want. No more forced restarts in the middle of a competitive gaming session or important presentation.
The change is live now for users on the Dev and Experimental Windows Insider channels, according to [a blog post](https://blogs.windows.com/windows-insider/2026/04/24/your-windows-update-experience-just-got-updated/) from the Windows Insider team. “You’ll be able to extend the pause end date as many times as you need,” Microsoft writes, marking a dramatic departure from the company’s previous stance on mandatory updates.
It’s part of a broader quality push that Microsoft telegraphed last month. In March, the company [committed to improving Windows 11](https://www.theverge.com/news/897834/microsoft-windows-11-quality-performance-commitments-changes) after sustained criticism about performance issues, buggy updates, and the platform’s habit of interrupting users at the worst possible moments. Making updates less disruptive sat at the top of that list.
The timing is interesting. Microsoft’s been walking a tightrope between security and user experience for years. Automatic updates became default behavior after the WannaCry ransomware attack in 2017 exploited unpatched Windows systems worldwide. But that security-first approach created its own problems – users lost trust in updates after repeated incidents of patches breaking hardware drivers, killing productivity apps, or causing system instability.
Now Microsoft’s betting it can have both. The indefinite pause option gives power users and gamers the control they want, while the default automatic update path keeps less technical users protected. It’s a compromise that acknowledges different users have different tolerance for interruption.
The feature works through the existing Windows Update settings panel. Users select a pause duration up to 35 days, then get the option to extend before that period expires. There’s no mention in Microsoft’s announcement of any maximum total pause duration, suggesting users could theoretically defer updates for months if they keep clicking extend.
That flexibility comes with obvious risks. Security researchers have long warned that delayed updates create windows of vulnerability – exactly what happened with WannaCry. But Microsoft seems willing to let users make that choice rather than force updates that drive them to disable Windows Update entirely through registry hacks and third-party tools.
The change also reflects competitive pressure. Apple’s macOS and various Linux distributions have long offered more granular update control. Windows was increasingly the outlier in forcing updates on a rigid schedule. For [Microsoft](https://www.microsoft.com) to keep Windows 11 adoption growing – particularly among power users and developers – it needed to address this pain point.
Insiders testing the feature are also getting other update improvements Microsoft promised in March. Those include [better update quality controls](https://www.theverge.com/tech/898082/microsoft-promises-to-end-forced-windows-updates-still-automatic) and more transparency about what each update actually changes. Microsoft says it’s working to make the entire update experience “more respectful of your time.”
The company hasn’t announced when the indefinite pause feature will reach general availability for all Windows 11 users. Insider features typically spend weeks or months in testing before rolling out broadly. But given Microsoft’s public commitments around update improvements, expect this to land for everyone within the next few months.
For now, Windows Insider members on the Dev and Experimental channels can start using the feature immediately. Those channels represent the bleeding edge of Windows development – unstable by design – so most users will want to wait for the stable release. But the feature’s arrival in Insider builds signals Microsoft’s serious about following through on its quality promises.
Microsoft’s decision to let users pause Windows Updates indefinitely represents a real shift in how the company thinks about user control versus security mandates. It won’t solve every Windows 11 complaint, but it addresses one of the most persistent frustrations users have voiced for years. The question now is whether giving users this much rope will lead to security problems down the line – or if Microsoft’s bet that informed choice beats forced compliance will pay off. Either way, gamers and power users finally have the update control they’ve been demanding.