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ComputingMicrosoftTechWindows

Microsoft adds direct-from-cloud OS recovery to Windows 11

In its newest experimental build, Microsoft is testing a "Cloud rebuild" feature that could make traditional, manual OS re-installs a thing of the past.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jul 7, 2026, 4:10 AM EDT
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Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE) Troubleshoot screen displaying recovery options, including Point-in-time restore, Reset this PC, Advanced options, and Cloud rebuild. The Cloud rebuild option is highlighted, indicating the feature to reinstall Windows from the cloud, removing all apps, settings, and personal files.
Image: Microsoft
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If you’ve spent any meaningful amount of time with PCs, you know the specific, sinking feeling of a computer that refuses to boot. It usually happens at the worst possible moment—right before a deadline, during an important meeting, or late on a Friday evening. In the past, that moment often signaled the beginning of a grueling ritual: digging through junk drawers to find a bootable USB drive, wrestling with installation media, or praying that a standard “Reset this PC” command would actually finish without throwing an error message.

Microsoft seems to have finally heard that collective sigh of frustration. In the latest Windows 11 Insider Experimental Preview Build 26300.8772, the company is testing a feature called “Cloud rebuild,” and if it works as advertised, it could fundamentally change how we deal with catastrophic OS failures.

The brilliance of Cloud rebuild isn’t just that it resets your computer; it’s how it does it. Traditionally, if you wanted to perform a truly clean install of Windows, you needed a separate machine to create a bootable USB installer. If your current PC was too corrupted to even load the recovery environment properly, you were often stuck. With this new approach, you can trigger a full OS reinstall directly from the Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE). The system intelligently connects to the internet—even from that pre-boot environment—and pulls down the Windows image and the necessary device drivers directly from Windows Update.

Essentially, it turns your computer into a self-healing device. You don’t need to worry about the health of the existing, broken OS, because you aren’t really relying on it. You’re just using the recovery environment as a gateway to download a fresh, “known-good” state of Windows. It’s a level of independence from the local drive that we’ve really only seen in mobile devices or Chromebooks until now. While it’s currently in testing for Insiders, it’s a promising sign that Microsoft is moving toward a more resilient, “just works” computing experience.

While the “Cloud rebuild” feature is the headline act for this build, the update also hints at a broader philosophy of making the Windows experience more robust, especially for those in professional environments. Starting in version 26H2, the backup policy for settings and app lists will be enabled by default for users on Microsoft Entra joined (formerly Azure AD) devices.

For the average consumer, this might sound like background noise, but it’s a big deal for IT departments and power users. By making “backup and restore” a default baseline, Microsoft is essentially ensuring that when a device is reset or reimaged, it can “phone home” and pull down your preferences, app lists, and settings automatically. It’s about minimizing the friction of setting up a new machine—or a recovered one—so you can get back to being productive instead of spending hours re-configuring your taskbar and apps.

Beyond the heavy-lifting recovery features, this preview build adds a few “quality of life” tweaks that suggest the Windows team is doing some spring cleaning. The Account Control flyout has received a fresh coat of paint, featuring a modern design and a clearer subscription badge. It’s a minor visual change, but it makes it significantly easier to see exactly what plan you’re on or identify benefits at a glance. They’ve also made a few subtle adjustments under the hood, like increasing the search box height by four pixels (a classic “tiny but noticeable” UI tweak) and adding gamepad navigation support to the Bluetooth quick settings page.

Of course, this is still an Experimental build, meaning these features are being rolled out to a subset of testers first. There is always the possibility that some of these might change or be shelved before they hit the general public. But if “Cloud rebuild” makes the jump from the Insider channel to the stable version of Windows 11, it will be the kind of “silent hero” feature that most people won’t appreciate until the day their computer refuses to start—and suddenly, it does.


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