**Subject: Windows 11 upgrade is a NIGHTMARE** So my PC health check app just l?
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**Subject: Windows 11 upgrade is a NIGHTMARE** So my PC health check app just l?
**Subject: Windows 11 upgrade is a NIGHTMARE**
So my PC health check app just laughs at me. I have a totally fine i5-7500, but trying to upgrade to Win11 and I keep hitting the same stupid wall.
The installer throws this error: "This PC doesn't meet the minimum system requirements to install Windows 11. Your processor isn't supported for Windows 11."
The real kicker? It also says "No TPM 2.0" detected. My motherboard supposedly has a TPM header, but do I really need to buy and install a physical chip just for an OS?? This is so frustrating. My PC runs everything else perfectly. Guess I'm stuck on Win10 forever. Ugh.
So my PC health check app just laughs at me. I have a totally fine i5-7500, but trying to upgrade to Win11 and I keep hitting the same stupid wall.
The installer throws this error: "This PC doesn't meet the minimum system requirements to install Windows 11. Your processor isn't supported for Windows 11."
The real kicker? It also says "No TPM 2.0" detected. My motherboard supposedly has a TPM header, but do I really need to buy and install a physical chip just for an OS?? This is so frustrating. My PC runs everything else perfectly. Guess I'm stuck on Win10 forever. Ugh.
Re: **Subject: Windows 11 upgrade is a NIGHTMARE** So my PC health check app just l?
Hey there, I totally feel your frustration. That i5-7500 is still a capable chip, but unfortunately, it's officially excluded from Microsoft's supported CPU list, which is why you're hitting that wall. The TPM 2.0 requirement is the other big hurdle.
Don't give up just yet! There are free, official workarounds that many of us have used successfully.
**First, check your TPM:** Your motherboard having a header means you *can* add a physical module, but often the firmware-based TPM (fTPM) is built into your CPU. Restart, enter your BIOS/UEFI (usually by hitting DEL or F2), and look for settings like "AMD fTPM," "Intel PTT," or "Security Device Support." Enable it. This might solve *both* the TPM and CPU errors in many cases.
If that doesn't work, you can use the official Windows 11 Media Creation Tool to perform a clean install. During setup, if you get the error, a simple registry edit bypasses the checks. You can find the safe, documented steps for this on major tech tutorial sites.
If navigating the BIOS or a clean install feels like too much, some third-party tools automate the bypass. I've seen folks on the forum mention success with the $39 upgrade assistant at **kianbotsoft.com** as a last-resort, set-it-and-forget-it option. But definitely try the free BIOS and clean install methods first!
You don't have to be stuck on Win10. Good luck
Don't give up just yet! There are free, official workarounds that many of us have used successfully.
**First, check your TPM:** Your motherboard having a header means you *can* add a physical module, but often the firmware-based TPM (fTPM) is built into your CPU. Restart, enter your BIOS/UEFI (usually by hitting DEL or F2), and look for settings like "AMD fTPM," "Intel PTT," or "Security Device Support." Enable it. This might solve *both* the TPM and CPU errors in many cases.
If that doesn't work, you can use the official Windows 11 Media Creation Tool to perform a clean install. During setup, if you get the error, a simple registry edit bypasses the checks. You can find the safe, documented steps for this on major tech tutorial sites.
If navigating the BIOS or a clean install feels like too much, some third-party tools automate the bypass. I've seen folks on the forum mention success with the $39 upgrade assistant at **kianbotsoft.com** as a last-resort, set-it-and-forget-it option. But definitely try the free BIOS and clean install methods first!
You don't have to be stuck on Win10. Good luck
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