Microsoft will begin rolling out the first wave of Windows 11 improvements on May 12, 2026, targeting performance and stability rather than new features.
The update, internally referred to as the Reliability Update by some analysts, stems from a pledge made early this year to reinvest attention in the operating system after a relatively quiet period. Unlike 2025, which saw several high-profile update failures, Microsoft has avoided major incidents so far, creating an opening for refinements that were previously deferred.
Testing in the Windows Insider Program shows the File Explorer responding more quickly, with background processes and code optimized to reduce lag. Long-standing irritations such as brief white flashes in the interface are expected to be eliminated. The clipboard menu, accessed via the Windows and V keys, will also operate with reduced latency.
Navigation within Settings is being streamlined for clarity and visual consistency. Microsoft plans to increase the maximum size for FAT32-formatted drives from 32 gigabytes to 2 terabytes, removing a software-imposed limit that had persisted despite the file system’s technical capacity for larger volumes. The change does not require hardware adjustments.
Memory management during updates is being adjusted to prevent the Delivery Optimization Service from consuming excessive RAM. This should reduce instances where background update downloads temporarily impair system responsiveness. The same service governs delivery from both Windows Update and the Microsoft Store.
Startup performance is also a focus. Applications configured to launch at sign-in will place less strain on system resources, addressing a common complaint about sluggish boot times on machines with numerous autostart entries.
Security components are receiving attention as well. Windows Hello authentication, including fingerprint and facial recognition, is being refined to improve reliability after sleep or hibernation cycles. These biometric systems had previously exhibited intermittent failures upon waking.
The May 12 Patch Tuesday serves as the initial rollout date for these changes, though Microsoft has not guaranteed flawless execution. Users will gauge the update’s real-world impact in the days following deployment.
Will this update include new Copilot AI features?
No, the sources indicate the May update focuses exclusively on performance, stability, and usability improvements, with no mention of additional Copilot integrations beyond what was already available.

Is the FAT32 change a hardware or software modification?
It is a software-only adjustment; Microsoft is removing an artificial cap in Windows 11 that prevented formatting FAT32 drives larger than 32 GB, though the file system itself has long supported volumes up to 2 TB.