Enabling TPM 2.0 on an AORUS motherboard is done through the BIOS using Intel PTT or AMD fTPM settings, with no physical chip required.
Windows 11 demands TPM 2.0, and if your AORUS board is one of the many GIGABYTE models that support it through firmware alone, you can flip this on in BIOS in under a minute. The fix for how to enable TPM 2.0 in AORUS BIOS is a few key presses away, but finding the right option depends on whether you run Intel or AMD — the setting lives in the same general area but goes by a different name on each platform.
What Is TPM 2.0 And Why Do You Need It?
TPM 2.0 is a security standard that verifies system integrity at boot. Windows 11 checks for it during installation and on every startup — if it is off, the PC may not qualify or may show compatibility warnings. GIGABYTE boards that are fully TPM 2.0 ready include Intel X299, C621, C232, C236, C246, 200, 300, 400, and 500 series, plus AMD TRX40, 300, 400, and 500 series. The vast majority do not need a physical TPM chip because the CPU handles it through built-in firmware.
How To Enter Your AORUS BIOS In Advanced Mode
You need Advanced Mode to see the TPM menu. Restart the PC and press Delete repeatedly during startup — that is the GIGABYTE standard key. The BIOS opens in Easy Mode by default. Press F2 to switch to Advanced Mode, which displays the full menu tree with the settings Windows 11 needs. If the system boots into Windows instead, shut down, wait a few seconds, and try again with the key pressed sooner.
Enabling TPM 2.0 On Your AORUS Motherboard: The Step Order That Works
Once inside Advanced Mode, the path splits depending on your CPU brand. Intel boards use Intel Platform Trust Technology (PTT). AMD boards use AMD CPU fTPM. Both deliver TPM 2.0 compliance through the processor itself. Navigate to Settings and look for Trusted Computing or Miscellaneous — the exact label varies by BIOS version. On many GIGABYTE AMD boards the official path is Settings > AMD CPU fTPM directly. Set the matching option to Enabled, press F10 to save and exit, and let the system reboot normally.
| Feature | Intel PTT | AMD fTPM |
|---|---|---|
| Platform | Intel CPUs and chipsets | AMD CPUs and chipsets |
| How It Works | Firmware in the Management Engine | Firmware embedded in the CPU |
| BIOS Option Name | Intel Platform Trust Technology | AMD CPU fTPM |
| Typical Menu Path | Settings > Miscellaneous > Trusted Computing | Settings > AMD CPU fTPM |
| TPM Specification Version | 2.0 | 2.0 |
| Windows 11 Compatibility | Full — passes the TPM check | Full — passes the TPM check |
| Physical Chip Required? | No — firmware only | No — firmware only |
How Do You Verify TPM 2.0 In Windows?
After the reboot, confirm the change took effect. Open the Run dialog with Windows + R, type tpm.msc, and press Enter. The TPM Management console opens. If it reports “The TPM is ready for use” and the specification version reads 2.0, the job is done. If the console shows no TPM found, the BIOS change likely did not save — reboot, recheck the setting, and hit F10 before exiting.
What If The TPM Option Is Missing?
Not seeing the option at all is the most common frustration. GIGABYTE’s own guidance points to a BIOS update as the first fix — older firmware may not expose the PTT or fTPM toggle. Download the latest BIOS for your board from the GIGABYTE website, update it using the built-in Q-Flash utility, and the option usually appears. A full step-by-step for AMD boards and Secure Boot prerequisites is available in GIGABYTE’s official FAQ 4395. On boards where the toggle remains genuinely absent, a discrete TPM 2.0 module can be added to the motherboard’s TPM header, but this is rarely necessary on recent AORUS models.
Common Mistakes That Wipe Out The Effort
The usual pitfalls cost people time and sometimes a boot failure. Looking under Security instead of Settings or Miscellaneous is the most wasted search — on GIGABYTE BIOS, TPM lives outside the Security section entirely. Forgetting to press F10 to save means the next boot shows nothing changed. Enabling Secure Boot before turning off CSM Support can lock the system out of Windows if the disk is not GPT. On AMD boards GIGABYTE warns that Secure Boot requires UEFI mode, so CSM Support must be Disabled and the boot drive must use GPT partitioning. Running the tpm.msc check immediately after the reboot catches most errors fast.
| Issue | Most Likely Cause | Quick Fix |
|---|---|---|
| TPM option missing in BIOS | Outdated BIOS firmware | Update BIOS using GIGABYTE Q-Flash |
| Windows reports no TPM | Change not saved before exit | Re-enter BIOS, enable setting, press F10 |
| Windows 11 still refuses TPM | PTT or fTPM still disabled | Double-check which option is enabled on your platform |
| System fails to boot after Secure Boot | CSM enabled or disk not GPT | Disable CSM Support and convert disk to GPT |
| Unsure which setting to change | Intel versus AMD confusion | Check your CPU — Intel uses PTT, AMD uses fTPM |
Enable TPM 2.0 On AORUS: The Sequence That Ships It
You now have a complete workflow. Boot to BIOS with Delete, press F2 for Advanced Mode, navigate to the TPM setting through Settings, enable Intel PTT or AMD CPU fTPM, save with F10, and verify with Windows + R > tpm.msc. If the option does not appear, update the BIOS via Q-Flash. If Secure Boot is part of the plan, disable CSM and confirm the disk is GPT before enabling it. That sequence covers every AORUS board in GIGABYTE’s supported families and delivers the TPM 2.0 status Windows 11 expects — no extra hardware, no repeated trips into the menu.
References & Sources
- GIGABYTE. “FAQ 4395: How to enable TPM for Intel and AMD motherboards.” Official step-by-step for AMD boards and Secure Boot prerequisites.
