For comparison's sake, I put together another table with some randomly picked Windows 11 x64 updates from the current 25H2 era. Swipe to scroll horizontallyKBDateSizeKB506683510/14/20253933.9 MB KB507031112/1/20254278.0 MBKB50771812/10/20264479.7 MBKB50793913/26/20264802.0 MB As I mentioned above, the most recent Windows 11 25H2 update from April 30, 2026, measures 5.1 GB. It's been a steady climb ever since 25H2 launched, and I don't know if there's a ceiling. So, what exactly is causing this Windows update scope creep? Rather than shipping a bunch of smaller patches, the company now prefers
Although Windows updates might arrive as a 5 GB download, your hard drive isn't necessarily eating that much space every time your PC updates. Or ... that's sort of the case. The size of an update listed on Microsoft's website isn't necessarily what your PC receives. Because Microsoft intelligently checks exactly what your specific system needs, your results vary each time a download is pushed. 👉 10 interesting facts about Windows 11 version 25H2 For example, if you're using a Copilot+ PC with an NPU, your update will include several gigabytes of AI model data that's used for core tools like S
Is the Windows Central community on board with the size of Windows updates?
The massive size of modern Windows updates isn't quite what it seems. Your specific PC might not receive the full package based on its AI capabilities or what update data already exists, and I do applaud Microsoft's approach in that respect. But one thing remains true: AI is contributing to some of the bloat, especially if you have a Copilot+ PC. 👉 Microsoft’s Insider overhaul finally gives us a simpler path, but I had to dig in to understand what really changes next I want to know what you think. Could this approach eventually get out of hand for Microsoft as it continues to add more core AI