MajorGeeks.Com » Overview» Tutorials and Video Guides » How to Bypass Secure Boot & Trusted Platform Module to Install Windows 11
By Timothy Tibbetts |
Windows 11 requires a Trusted Platform Module (TPM) chip to install during the beta period. Here's a registry hack to bypass TPM and install Windows 11.
You can install Windows 11 with Windows 11 Installation Assistant or Microsoft Windows Media Creation Tool.
6 Ways to See if Your Computer Has a Trusted Platform Module (TPM) Chip
We need to create a new registry key or download our registry files. You should back up your registry.
How to Bypass Secure Boot & Trusted Platform Module to Install Windows 11 - Registry Files
Download Bypass Secure Boot and Trusted Platform Module and extract the two files.
Double-click on Windows 11 - Bypass TPM And Secure Boot.reg or Windows 11 - Bypass TPM And Secure Boot DEFAULT.reg (Default).
Click Yes when prompted by User Account Control.
Click Yes when prompted by Registry Editor.
Click OK when prompted by the Registry Editor. Reboot.
This tweak is included as part of MajorGeeks Windows Tweaks, and donations to the project and MajorGeeks are accepted here.
How to Bypass Secure Boot & Trusted Platform Module to Install Windows 11 - Registry Editor
Start the Windows 11 installation until you see "This PC can't run Windows 11."
Press Shift + F10
At the Command Prompt type in regedit, and press Enter.
Go to Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\Setup
Right-click on Setup and click New > Key. Name that LabConfig
Click on LabConfig, then right-click on the right pane, and click New > DWORD (32-bit Value).
Name that BypassTPMCheck
Double-click on ByPassTPMCheck and change the Value data to 1, and press OK.
Next, create two more DWORDS and change the Value data to 1 just like you did above and name them BypassRAMCheck and BypassSecureBootCheck.
It should look like this when done:
Close the Registry Editor.
Type exit and press Enter in the Command Prompt.
Click on the Back button where you left off at the "This PC can't run Windows 11" message, and see if you can now install Windows 11.
Delete the LabConfig to restore the registry.
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