Windows 10 has reached its end-of-life, but it is still possible to upgrade unsupported PCs to Windows 11 by bypassing the TPM and RAM checks.
The requirements that can be bypassed include TPM 2.0, 4GB of RAM, and SecureBoot, allowing for the installation of Windows 11 25H2 on unsupported PCs that shipped with Windows 10.
Yes, you can still bypass Windows 11 requirements TPM 2.0, 4GB of RAM and SecureBoot.
Tests have been conducted with the most recent version of Windows 11 25H2, and all known bypasses still work.
Windows 10 officially reached its end-of-life on October 14, 2025, after more than ten years since its launch, and the aging OS ran smoothly on older hardware.
However, if a PC does not support Windows 11's minimum requirements, it is possible to bypass these requirements to install the newer OS.
One of the major criticisms of Windows 11 when it launched on October 5, 2021, was the "unreasonable" requirements set by Microsoft for Windows 10 PCs to be upgraded to the newer OS.
Author's summary: Bypassing Windows 11 requirements is still possible.