Windows 10 upgrades won't be free for everyone
Do you qualify for the free Windows 10 upgrades?
Summary:
Microsoft's free
upgrade offer for Windows 10 comes with an asterisk and some fine print. Most
modern PCs qualify, but beware if you build or buy custom PCs or you want to
run Windows 10 in a virtual machine. We've got the details.
One question We've been
asked more often than any other lately is this: "If I'm running the
Windows 10 Preview, do I get a free license when the Preview is over?"
Is this a physical
device or a virtual machine?
With extremely rare
exceptions, virtual machines don't include a Windows license. Skip ahead to the
next section for details on how to acquire a qualifying license.
If this is a physical
device, such as a desktop PC, laptop, or tablet, it needs to have a proper
underlying license to be eligible for the free upgrade. Most PCs sold through
the commercial and retail channel come with a home or business edition of
Windows already installed. All Macs come with OS X.
Which operating system
was preinstalled on your PC?
Most brand-name PCs
are sold with an operating system, typically the most recent version of Windows
available when the PC was built or, in the case of a Mac, the latest version of
OS X. If you built the PC yourself or purchased it from a local shop, you might
have bought a so-called naked PC, one with no operating system.
Microsoft says you can
get a Windows 10 upgrade for free if you have a proper license for Windows 7
Service Pack 1 or Windows 8.1 and you claim the free upgrade within one year of
the launch of Windows 10.
For Windows devices,
you can look for a sticker on the side or bottom of the device (for a portable
PC it's sometimes hidden in a battery compartment or attached to the power
supply). You can also check the paperwork or the manufacturer's specs for the
specific model you're looking at.
Eligible for a free
upgrade
·
Windows
7 Service Pack 1
is required before you can upgrade using Windows Update. But all PCs sold with
Windows 7, even pre-SP1, qualify for the upgrade.
·
Windows
8 You must first
upgrade to Windows 8.1 (free in the Windows Store) and then install the free
Windows 8.1 Update from Windows Update. After that's complete, you're eligible
for the free Windows 10 upgrade.
·
Windows
8.1 You can upgrade
to Windows 10 from Windows Update.
Not eligible for a
free upgrade
·
No
operating system If you built the
PC or bought it without a qualifying copy of Windows, you are not automatically
eligible for a free upgrade, even if you are currently running the Windows 10
preview. This is also true if you are running the Windows 10 preview in a VM.
You have to install a "qualifying license" first. (See the following
section for a definition of what that is.)
·
Windows
XP or Windows Vista Your (probably
very old) PC is not automatically eligible for a free Windows 10 upgrade.
However, it may qualify if you upgraded to a later Windows version. For
example, if you bought a $40 Windows 8 upgrade from Microsoft in the months
after Windows 8 was first released and used that license and product key on
this machine, you qualify for a free upgrade.
·
Windows
RT Your device
cannot be upgraded to Windows 10. Microsoft says some features from Windows 10
will be available in an update to Windows RT sometime in the future.
·
OS
X (any version) Your Mac needs a
qualifying license to run Windows. This is true whether you plan to use Boot
Camp or run Windows in a virtual machine.
If your preinstalled
OS doesn't qualify for a free Windows 10 upgrade, what options do you have?
You need what
Microsoft calls a "qualifying license" if you're installing Windows
10 in a virtual machine, on a Mac using Boot Camp, or on a PC you built or
bought that did not include Windows as part of the final product.
You might already have
a qualifying edition if you purchased a retail copy of Windows 7, Windows 8, or
Windows 8.1. If you have already assigned that license to your PC or virtual
machine, it qualifies for the free upgrade to Windows 10. You can transfer that
license to any physical or virtual PC and it will be eligible for a Windows 10
upgrade.
You can also use an
OEM copy of Windows. Windows 8 is the only OEM version that includes Personal Use Rights (PUR). For some bizarre
reason, Microsoft removed PUR from the Windows 8.1 OEM license. Technically,
you can't use an OEM copy of Windows 7 or Windows 8.1 on a PC or virtual
machine you create. In practice, this use is so common that it's impossible to
imagine Microsoft trying to enforce those technical license rights.
The best strategy
might be to wait a bit longer. Windows boss Terry Myerson says Microsoft is
planning some "very attractive offers" for OEMs to offer customers
with so-called Non-Genuine Windows PCs. It's not certain whether those offers
will be limited to China and other markets that are saturated with pirated
copies of Windows.
Note that none of this
has anything to do with how you install Windows 10. If your device is qualified
for a Windows 10 upgrade because it originally came with Windows 7
preinstalled, you can claim the free upgrade before the first year is up. At
that point, you have a valid license for Windows 10 on that device and you can
install, repair, refresh, reset, or reinstall as necessary. More details on
that after Microsoft finalizes its launch plans.
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