How To Enroll In Windows 10 ESU | Keep Patches Coming

Windows 10 ESU enrollment uses Windows Update, a Microsoft account, and one of three options through October 13, 2026.

A Windows 10 PC keeps turning on after normal support ends, but it stops getting regular security fixes unless the PC is enrolled. For anyone checking how to enroll in Windows 10 ESU, the path is inside Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update, not a separate installer.

The offer is meant for people who need more time before moving to Windows 11. The shortest path is to update Windows 10 first, sign in with an adult administrator Microsoft account, choose the enrollment option Windows shows, and confirm the PC appears as enrolled in Windows Update.

Who Can Enroll In Windows 10 ESU?

Windows 10 ESU is for eligible consumer PCs running Windows 10 version 22H2 on Home, Professional, Pro Education, or Workstations editions. A work-managed PC may need the commercial ESU path instead.

Check your version before hunting for the button. Press Start, open Settings, choose System, then About. Under Windows specifications, look for version 22H2 and the edition name.

  • Use a Microsoft account with administrator rights on that PC.
  • A child Microsoft account cannot enroll the PC.
  • Domain-joined, Microsoft Entra-joined, MDM-managed, kiosk, or already licensed ESU devices do not use the consumer offer.
  • Microsoft Entra registered devices can still use the consumer offer.

Enrolling In Windows 10 ESU: Choices Before You Tap

Consumer Windows 10 ESU gives the same security-update result whether you use Windows Backup, Microsoft Rewards, or the $30 purchase option. The choice only changes how you qualify for the license.

Microsoft says consumer ESU covers eligible security updates for enrolled Windows 10 version 22H2 PCs, but it does not add feature upgrades, design changes, nonsecurity fixes, or regular technical help. Microsoft’s Windows 10 ESU enrollment page lists the current prerequisites, pricing, enrollment path, and October 13, 2026 program end date.

Enrollment Option What You Need Good Fit
Back up Windows settings Turn on PC settings backup with the enrolling Microsoft account No-additional-cost enrollment for one Microsoft account
Redeem Microsoft Rewards 1,000 Microsoft Rewards points People who already have Rewards points
One-time purchase $30 USD plus any applicable tax People who do not want backup or Rewards
Extra home PCs Same Microsoft account used on the first enrolled PC Up to 10 eligible Windows 10 devices
Business-owned PCs Commercial ESU license and IT activation Domain, Entra-joined, or managed devices
Windows 11-capable PCs Free Windows 11 upgrade eligibility Longer support without ESU enrollment
Unsupported edition Edition change or different lifecycle LTSC, Enterprise, or managed cases

Enroll From Windows Update

Windows Update is the normal consumer enrollment screen. Install every offered Windows update first, then return to Windows Update and use the ESU prompt.

  1. Open Start > Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update.
  2. Select Check for updates, install all available updates, and restart if Windows asks.
  3. Return to Windows Update and select Enroll now when the ESU link appears.
  4. Sign in with your Microsoft account if Windows asks. The account must be an administrator account, not a child account.
  5. Choose Back up your settings, Redeem Rewards, or Purchase, then follow the on-screen prompts.
  6. After enrollment, go back to Windows Update. The page should show that your PC is enrolled, and ESU security updates will arrive through Windows Update.

For a second eligible PC, use the same Microsoft account, open Windows Update, choose Enroll now, then select Add device when Windows offers it.

Why Is Enroll Now Missing?

The Enroll now link usually goes missing because the PC is not fully updated, is not on Windows 10 version 22H2, uses an ineligible account, or is managed like a work device. Fix those items before assuming the offer is unavailable.

Microsoft also released KB5071959 after some consumer PCs had enrollment wizard failures. If your eligible PC still cannot enroll, run Check for updates, install KB5071959 or any newer cumulative update Windows offers, restart, and check Windows Update again.

What You See Likely Cause Move To Make
No ESU link Windows 10 is not fully updated Run Check for updates, install updates, restart
No ESU link on 21H2 Wrong Windows 10 version Move to version 22H2 first
Account blocked Child or non-admin Microsoft account Enroll from an adult administrator account
Offer unavailable Domain, Entra, MDM, or kiosk setup Ask IT for commercial ESU enrollment
Wizard fails Known enrollment bug on some PCs Install KB5071959 or a newer update, then retry
Second PC asks again Different Microsoft account Sign in with the first enrolled account and use Add device

What To Do After Enrollment

Enrollment is not the finish line; Windows Update still has to install ESU releases when Microsoft ships them. Leave automatic updates on, restart when asked, and check the update history after each monthly security release.

Use this sequence if the PC will stay on Windows 10 for several more months:

  • Keep Windows Update set to receive updates automatically.
  • Keep Microsoft Defender Antivirus or another trusted antivirus active.
  • Remove browsers, remote-access tools, and apps you no longer use.
  • Plan the Windows 11 move or PC replacement before October 13, 2026.

Windows 10 ESU buys time, not a new product life. A fully enrolled PC gets security patches during the ESU period, but Windows 11 or a newer PC is the longer-term fix once your hardware can handle it.

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