Google Chrome is reportedly checking whether your Windows 10 PC can be upgraded to Windows 11

Based on a Chromium commit, Google's web browser is peeking at whether your PC is eligible for Windows 11, and this functionality is supposedly live now.

Google Chrome is reportedly checking whether your Windows 10 PC can be upgraded to Windows 11
Comment IconFacebook IconX IconReddit Icon
Tech Reporter
Published
2-minute read time
TL;DR: With Windows 10 support ending in October 2025, Google's Chrome browser is reportedly now tracking PC eligibility for Windows 11 upgrades (using anonymized data). This appears to be an effort to help Google gauge how long it will need to maintain support for Windows 10 with Chrome.

With only three months left on the clock for Windows 10 support, it seems Google's Chrome browser is now peeking at whether PCs running the older Microsoft operating system are eligible to upgrade to Windows 11.

Chrome is peeking at your upgrade eligibility, apparently (Image Credit: Google)
Chrome is peeking at your upgrade eligibility, apparently (Image Credit: Google)

Yes, Windows Latest picked up on Google's Chromium commit outlining this capability, which reads: "Adding a metric for determining Win11 upgrade eligibility. This metric is recorded at startup for Chrome running on Win10. Records a boolean histogram that represents if the hardware is capable of being upgraded to Win11."

According to Windows Latest's detective work, this change is already live in the web browser.

The data Google is using here is anonymized, as you'd expect, but still - what business has the company got in determining whether or not your PC is actually capable of being upgraded to Windows 11?

Well, clearly the ability to work out the potential number of upgraders, and conversely those who will be stuck on Windows 10 for good (unless they buy a new machine), is going to be handy to know for Google in terms of figuring out how long Chrome might have to support Windows 10.

It's not really surprising that Google is thinking about this given that Windows 10 is set to run out of support in October 2025.

Of course, this time round, there may well be a lot more folks sticking with an outdated OS, because there's an option for consumers to pay for extended support and an extra year of updates.

Indeed, you don't even have to pay if you're willing to sync your PC settings to the cloud (not all your files - just settings) using the Windows Backup app, as that's an alternative option recently added by Microsoft.

Best Deals: Dell Inspiron 15 15.6" Touchscreen Laptop Computer for Student Study and Business, 13th Gen Intel 10-Core i5-1334U (Beat i7-1250U), 32GB DDR4 RAM, 1TB
Today7 days ago30 days ago
$1183.99 CAD$1183.99 CAD
Check PriceCheck Price
* Prices last scanned 5/21/2026 at 12:59 am CDT - prices may be inaccurate. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. We earn affiliate commission from any Newegg or PCCG sales.

Tech Reporter

Email IconX IconLinkedIn Icon

Darren has written for numerous magazines and websites in the technology world for almost 30 years, including TechRadar, PC Gamer, Eurogamer, Computeractive, and many more. He worked on his first magazine (PC Home) long before Google and most of the rest of the web existed. In his spare time, he can be found gaming, going to the gym, and writing books (his debut novel - 'I Know What You Did Last Supper' - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).

Stay Updated

Follow TweakTown for breaking tech news, reviews, and daily updates.

Add TweakTown as a preferred source on GoogleFind TweakTown on Apple News
Newsletter Subscription