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ComputingMicrosoftTechWindows

Microsoft confirms Windows 11 SE is being discontinued

Windows 11 SE, Microsoft's budget-friendly ChromeOS rival for schools, is being discontinued and won't receive the 25H2 update.

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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Aug 1, 2025, 1:11 PM EDT
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Microsoft Surface Laptop SE
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Microsoft’s five-year-foray into the education market has come to an end. In an updated support bulletin, Microsoft quietly revealed that Windows 11 SE will reach end of life—including software updates, technical assistance, and security patches—in October 2026. First unveiled in November 2021 as a ChromeOS rival for budget-friendly school laptops, Windows 11 SE was designed to lock down devices for simpler management and encourage schools to embrace Progressive Web Apps over legacy desktop software. Yet despite partnerships with Acer, Asus, Dell, Dynabook, Fujitsu, HP, JK-IP, Lenovo, Positivo—and even Microsoft’s own $249 Surface Laptop SE—Windows 11 SE never managed to displace Google’s classroom favorite.

By opting out of the eagerly anticipated 25H2 feature update, Windows 11 SE devices are effectively frozen on version 24H2 until support sunsets next fall. That means no fresh features, performance boosts, or security care beyond October 2026. Although machines will continue to boot and run, Microsoft urges IT administrators to plan migrations to full-fledged Windows 11 Home, Pro, or Education editions to maintain a supported environment—and, crucially, to keep security defenses up to date.

Windows 11 SE was far from Microsoft’s first attempt at a Chromebook competitor. Back in 2017, the company rolled out “S Mode” for Windows 10, shackling devices to apps from the Microsoft Store. While the idea held promise—simplified management, faster updates—schools and students quickly ran up against a barren app ecosystem, spawning workarounds and grumbling. Windows 11 SE’s model doubled down on web-first principles: Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) opened daily tools, while win32 applications required special whitelisting by IT. A tightly curated list of allowed software became both a blessing and a burden, ushering in fewer headaches for admins but more frustration for teachers seeking familiar desktop apps.

Behind Microsoft’s retreat lies the harsh reality of Chromebook dominance—and its own ebbing tide. Gartner warned in 2024 that Chromebooks were “losing market share due to their limited customer base and inferior build quality,” a signal that Google’s simple devices were ripe for challenge. Yet even with that cautionary note, IDC data show Chromebook shipments plunged nearly 48 percent in full-year 2022 after a pandemic-driven peak, with a 24.3 percent drop in Q4 alone—underscoring how demand in education has cooled and supply chains rebalanced.

At the same time, Windows 11 itself has gained traction. In July 2025, for the first time, Windows 11 claimed a majority share of the desktop OS market—51.8 percent—surpassing Windows 10 at 45.0 percent. That momentum, fueled by ongoing feature updates, enterprise rollouts, and broader compatibility with both legacy and modern software, means schools upgrading PCs are more often choosing full Windows 11 deployments instead of a niche, web-centric edition.

What’s next for education-focused devices? Microsoft will continue offering “Pro Education” and “Education” editions of Windows 11—both benefiting from three-year support lifecycles, richer management tools, and access to the full Microsoft 365 app suite. Hardware partners are likely to lean into these editions, delivering detachable 2-in-1s and ruggedized notebooks that balance classroom simplicity with desktop flexibility. Google, for its part, still faces questions about premium Chromebook licensing and hardware quality, even as it retools its ChromeOS roadmap to court institutions with upgraded security and Android-app support.

For the thousands of schools that once embraced Windows 11 SE, the shutdown is both an endpoint and a nudge toward fuller Windows experiences. Administrators now have a clear deadline: migrate, update, or risk running an unsupported OS. Five years in, Microsoft’s slimmed-down Windows experiment may be ending, but its lessons—about app ecosystems, web vs. desktop balance, and the complexities of education IT—will inform the next chapter of school computing.


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