If you haven’t installed Windows 10 on your PC before, you’ll have to perform an upgrade first before you can clean install.
If this doesn’t make any sense, that’s because Microsoft never makes
licensing easy, even when there’s a free version. Once you’ve performed
the upgrade and activated your Windows 10 upgrade on a PC, Microsoft
will associate your unique hardware ID with an activated Windows 10
license, and you can reinstall as you see fit. But not until you’ve
upgraded Windows 7 or 8 to Windows 10 and then activated.
Just keep in mind that Windows 10 is only provided for free as an upgrade. You can’t clean install it, there are no keys at this point. Unless you use our clean install workaround.
- Step 1: Download the Windows 10 ISO image from Microsoft’s web site. Alternatively you can download the web installer from the same page and just choose to upgrade your PC, which is the easiest option.
- Step 2: If you are installing on a regular PC with Windows already on it, you’ll be prompted immediately to start the upgrade process. Alternatively, you can burn it to an optical disk or create a bootable USB flash drive. Otherwise, just attach the ISO image using the virtual machine software of your choice (assuming your virtual machine already has Windows 7 or 8 installed).
- Step 3: Install it mostly by clicking the Next button, making sure to choose Upgrade when prompted. If you want to clean install, follow our clean install instructions instead.
- Note: Now that Windows 10 is released, you’re going to need a valid Windows license key for 7, 8, or 8.1 in order to perform the upgrade.
For posterity, here are all of the installation steps if you’re
booting from a flash drive, although you could just remember the word
“Next” and get through it fine. Just remember to choose Upgrade when
prompted unless you’ve previously upgraded and activated Windows 10 on
this computer.
When you first boot the computer you’ll see a screen like this one:
Click Next and you’ll be taken to the Install now button screen. Which obviously you should click.
At this point you can choose whether you want to upgrade Windows or
install a new custom install. Since we’re recommending that everybody
install into a virtual machine or on a test PC, you should select Custom
here.
Update: You should probably choose to Upgrade the first time, because the license key might not work otherwise.
At this point you’ll need to pick where to install Windows 10. You
might need to delete or create a partition, but if you are using a
virtual machine, you can just click Next.
And now it will install.
Once the PC reboots again, you’ll be able to select the settings like
whether Windows Updates are enabled (they aren’t allowed to be disabled
in the preview). We’d recommend just using the express settings if you
are using a test machine — use Custom if you’re really going to use the
computer.
And now you can sign into your Microsoft account. We’d recommend
using a Microsoft account because otherwise you won’t be able to use
half of the new features and you may as well use Linux or stick with
Windows 7.
If you’ve setup your account properly you’ll probably be asked to
verify it in the middle. We excluded those steps from this article, but
they are pretty simple.
Now you’ll be asked how to setup the PC. Since we wanted to test
everything as a new computer, we chose to set it up as a new PC instead,
but you could copy all your settings from another computer if you
wanted to.
Want to use OneDrive? It’s nicely integrated into Windows, so we just left it alone.
And now a colorful screen that tells us things are happening.
And finally, we are at the desktop! Note that the desktop on the full
release of Windows 10 looks different, and this screenshot came from a
pre-release version.
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