Windows 11 finally gets its taskbar back

Microsoft's long-overdue Taskbar overhaul signals the company is finally listening to Windows 11 users

Microsoft is about to fix one of Windows 11’s most controversial decisions. After nearly five years of user complaints, the company is bringing back the ability to move and resize the Taskbar, and it’s treating this like the priority it should’ve been from day one.

Since Windows 11 launched in 2021, users have been screaming into the void about the locked Taskbar. It’s wild when you think about it, this was a feature that existed since Windows 95, something PC users took for granted for over two decades.

Then Microsoft decided to rebuild the Taskbar from scratch for Windows 11 and just… left out the ability to move it. The backlash was immediate, but here we are in 2026 and the company is, finally, listening.

Microsoft’s taskbar redemption arc

According to sources familiar with Microsoft’s plans, the revamped Taskbar will support positioning on the left, right, or top of the display. The team is making sure all the flyouts and buttons function properly regardless of orientation, which honestly should’ve been table stakes. But hey, better late than never.

Windows 11 finally gets its taskbar back

What’s even better? Microsoft isn’t stopping at just moving the Taskbar around. They’re also working on resizing capabilities, giving users control over how much screen real estate the Taskbar occupies. It’s the kind of customization that power users have been demanding since launch, and it signals that Microsoft is actually paying attention to feedback this time.

Development is already underway, with plans to unveil these features later this year if everything stays on track. The Windows team has reportedly flagged this as high priority, pouring extra resources into it to ensure a timely release. That’s a good sign, it means they’re not just throwing this on the backlog to rot.

The bigger picture: Windows 11 gets a tune-up

The Taskbar improvements are just one piece of Microsoft’s larger strategy to rebuild trust with Windows 11 users.

The company is scrambling to address top-level complaints that have eroded confidence over the past two years, including system performance issues and File Explorer problems. It’s clear they’re feeling the heat and trying to generate some positive sentiment before users completely give up on the OS.

This push to fix “pain points” feels like Microsoft finally acknowledging what everyone already knew: Windows 11 launched half-baked. Removing features people relied on for decades wasn’t innovative, it was frustrating. The fact that it took this long to course-correct is baffling, but at least they’re doing it.

The Taskbar changes won’t fix everything wrong with Windows 11, but they’re a step in the right direction. For users who’ve been stuck with a bottom-locked Taskbar or switched back to Windows 10 out of spite, this might be the olive branch Microsoft needs to offer.

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