Windows updates have a frustrating habit of appearing at the worst possible moment — mid-presentation, before an important deadline, or just when you’re about to start a video call. The good news is that Windows 11 gives you more control over when updates install than earlier versions did. Here’s how to stop updates interrupting your work, without leaving your PC unprotected.
Set Active Hours — The Most Important Step
Active Hours tells Windows not to automatically restart for updates during your working day. It won’t stop updates downloading in the background, but it prevents the forced restarts that interrupt your work.
- Open Settings → Windows Update → Advanced options
- Click Active hours
- Switch from Automatically to Manually
- Set your active hours — for example, 8am to 6pm
Windows will now only restart for updates outside of this window. Updates will still download and install in the background during working hours, but the disruptive restart won’t happen until you’re done.
Pause Updates Temporarily
If you have an important project or deadline and want to prevent any update activity for a set period, you can pause updates entirely.
- Open Settings → Windows Update
- Click Pause updates
- Select how long to pause — up to 5 weeks
After the pause period expires, Windows will require you to install accumulated updates before you can pause again. Don’t use this as a way to permanently avoid updates — security patches are important.
Schedule Updates for a Specific Time
After an update has downloaded, Windows will often prompt you to restart. Rather than dismissing the prompt repeatedly (and risking it restarting at a bad time), schedule the restart for a time that suits you:
- When Windows shows the restart notification, click Schedule the restart
- Pick a time — overnight or early morning works well
This way updates get installed without interrupting your workday, and you start the next morning with a fresh, updated machine.
Disable Automatic Driver Updates (Optional)
Windows Update also installs driver updates, which occasionally cause hardware issues. If you’ve had problems with a specific driver updating and breaking something (audio, display, or peripherals are common), you can prevent Windows from automatically downloading manufacturer updates:
- Search for View advanced system settings in the Start menu
- Click Hardware tab → Device Installation Settings
- Select No (your device might not work as expected)
Only use this if you’ve had driver-related issues. For most users, automatic driver updates cause no problems.
For Business PCs Managed by IT
If your PC is managed by a company IT department through Microsoft Intune, Group Policy, or Windows Server Update Services (WSUS), your IT team controls when updates install. Individual settings may be locked. If you’re having update-related disruption on a managed device, the right fix is to ask your IT team to configure a company-wide maintenance window — rather than trying to change settings locally, which may be blocked.
What You Should Not Do
Don’t use third-party tools that claim to permanently disable Windows Update. These tools are generally risky, often bundled with malware, and leave your PC vulnerable to security threats. Windows security patches protect against actively exploited vulnerabilities — a PC that hasn’t been patched for months is a genuine risk.
Also avoid setting your internet connection as Metered to block updates — this is a workaround that prevents some downloads but doesn’t give you reliable control and can cause other software to misbehave.
Managing Update Restarts on a Schedule
The healthiest approach for most office workers is:
- Set Active Hours to cover your working day
- When an update is ready, schedule the restart for tonight or first thing tomorrow
- Restart on schedule and start fresh
This keeps your PC secure and means you’re never caught mid-work by an unexpected restart.


