

To install the update anyway, you can now head to Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update and click the “Check for Updates” button. There’s some risk here, but you are still installing a stable operating system update. After all, you can always downgrade back to your current version of Windows 10 if you have any problems, assuming you choose to do so within ten days after upgrading. However, you can override this and choose to install the update anyway. If your PC doesn’t get the update, Microsoft isn’t entirely confident it will work on your hardware just yet. Instead, Microsoft rolls them out slowly over time, after both Microsoft and the various PC manufacturers check to see if they cause problems with different hardware configurations. But Microsoft doesn’t offer new Windows updates to all PCs at once. When Microsoft provides the update to your PC, it automatically installs itself.

If you see a higher version number than 21H2 on your system, you’re likely running an unstable Insider Preview version of Windows. In the screenshot, the PC is running Windows 10 version 20H2. Rest assured that, if the Settings app says you’re using version 21H2, you have the latest version.

Note: 21H2 is a smaller update, so the “Installed On” date may not be updated here and may show a date in 2020 instead of 2021. If you see a lower version number, you’re using an older version. A version number of “21H2” indicates you’re using the November 2021 Update.
