Microsoft’s January 2026 Windows 11 security update KB5074109 has triggered multiple system stability issues, including lockups and black screens, prompting users to uninstall it. Reports highlight graphics regressions and app failures affecting both consumer and enterprise setups.
KB5074109 targets Windows 11 versions 24H2 (build 26200.7623) and 25H2 (build 26100.7623), delivering over 100 security fixes, including three zero-days, alongside non-security improvements like NPU power optimization.
Released on Patch Tuesday, January 13, 2026, it includes servicing stack update KB5071142 and AI components for Copilot+ PCs. Microsoft simplified update titles in this release for clarity.
Graphics and Lockup Problems
Users report full system lockups without blue screens, particularly in graphics-intensive apps like BforArtists 5.0, a Blender fork, when switching viewport shading modes.
These hangs stem from DirectX and GPU driver regressions triggered by kernel or graphics stack changes in the update.
Black screens plague Nvidia and AMD GPU systems post-install, alongside File Explorer ignoring desktop.ini LocalizedResourceName settings.
Microsoft confirmed credential prompt failures in Azure Virtual Desktop (AVD) and Windows 365 using the Windows App, affecting remote RDP connections with errors like 0x80080005.
An out-of-band fix, KB5077744, resolved this on January 17, 2026. Outlook Classic freezes on POP/SMTP accounts, showing “Not Responding” screens or refusing to launch due to lingering processes. Broader cloud storage issues cause apps to hang when saving to OneDrive or Dropbox, including missing Outlook PST emails.
Microsoft’s release health dashboard lists ongoing unresponsive apps with cloud-backed storage as confirmed, recommending developers contact or PST relocation from OneDrive.
A prior lock screen password icon glitch affects enterprises, mitigated via Known Issue Rollback (KIR) Group Policy. No broad consumer rollback advisory exists, but enterprise admins deploy KIR for select regressions.
User Fixes and Workarounds
Affected users uninstall KB5074109 via Settings > Windows Update > Update history > Uninstall updates, followed by a reboot.
GPU vendors like Nvidia/AMD urge the latest WHQL drivers; roll back if needed. Pause updates temporarily, monitor Microsoft’s pages, or test prior drivers for graphics hangs. For AVD, use the Remote Desktop client or the web client as an interim.
While regressions disrupt workflows, the update patches critical vulnerabilities, creating a dilemma for security-conscious admins. Enterprises balance stability against zero-day exposure by using KIR or selective deployment.
Microsoft coordinates fixes, promising future rollups without guaranteed regression resolutions. Users in high-risk environments prioritize patches despite risks, awaiting vendor alignments.
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