Windows 10 introduced a new taskbar that is different from the one in Windows 8.1 and Windows 7. The taskbar in Windows 11 is organized differently, and it has a few more features than the one in Windows 10. Here are some of the differences: -The taskbar in Windows 11 is divided into three parts: the Start button, the System Tray, and the Taskbar. The Start button is at the top of the taskbar, and it has a blue arrow next to it. The System Tray is at the bottom of the taskbar, and it has a green arrow next to it. The Taskbar has three buttons: One for opening windows, one for closing windows, and one for managing tasks. -The buttons on the Taskbar are numbered from 1 to 3. The first button on the left side of the Taskbar is called “Open Window.” It opens a window that you can click on to open it. The second button on the left side of the Taskbar is called “Close Window.” It closes all of your open windows. The third button on the left side of the Taskbar is called “Manage Tasks.” It lets you manage your tasks by opening or closing windows, opening or closing tabs, or adding or removing tasks from your list of tasks.


Along with new icons and a fresh Start menu, a new taskbar will arrive with Windows 11 when it launches in fall 2021. Here’s an early look at how it compares and contrasts with the taskbar in Windows 10.

The Start Menu and App Icons Are Centered

In the most obvious change to the taskbar since Windows 95, Windows 11 positions the Start button and app icons in the center of the taskbar by default. You can still align them to the left if you’d like, but the central layout might seem better on touch screen devices when they’re used as tablets.

RELATED: How to Move the Taskbar Icons to the Left on Windows 11

There’s a Quick Settings Button

In place of the Action Center (called up by the notifications button in Windows 10), Windows 11 includes a Quick Settings menu that resembles Control Center for macOS. With this menu, you can quickly change the system volume, screen brightness, communications options, and more. To bring it up, you can click the volume and Wi-Fi status icons in the taskbar beside the date and time. Or, you can press Ctrl+A on your keyboard.

RELATED: 5 Ways Windows 11’s Taskbar Is Worse Than Windows 10’s

Icons Only: You Can’t Use Labels Anymore

Windows 10 hid taskbar button labels by default (that show each window’s title name written out), but you could still turn them back on using the “Combine Taskbar Labels” option in Settings. In Windows 11, app windows are always “combined” on the taskbar into a single app icon, and you can’t see any written labels describing their contents on the taskbar itself without hovering over the app icon to get a thumbnail preview or a list.

RELATED: How to See Classic Window Labels on Windows 10’s Taskbar

It’s Glued to the Bottom of the Screen

In Windows 10, it was easy to drag the taskbar to either edge of your screen, or even to the top. In Windows 11, the taskbar always lives along the bottom edge of the screen, and you can’t move it. This might change in a future release, but for now, Microsoft included it in a list of deprecated features.

RELATED: Windows 11 Won’t Let You Move the Taskbar (But It Should)

It’s Always the Same Size

In Windows 10, you can drag the top of the taskbar to make it larger or smaller, as long as it’s not locked. In Windows 11, you can’t resize the taskbar at all. Without labels and with wide resolutions these days, that’s not so much of a problem. But if you completely fill up the taskbar with apps, they start stacking up on top of each other in a special section on the right side of the taskbar. It seems that dealing with that scenario hasn’t been resolved yet in the Windows 11 Preview release.

RELATED: How to Change the Height or Width of the Taskbar on Windows 10

Taskbar Icons Hide Notification Badges

In Windows 11, taskbar icons can have tiny notification badges on them, but this feature is off by default in the Windows 11 Preview. You can enable it if you turn on “Show badges (unread messages counter) on taskbar apps” in Settings > Personalization > Taskbar > Taskbar Behaviors. Once that’s enabled, you’ll see the number of unread messages or notifications listed in a red circle just above the app icon.

RELATED: How to Hide the Annoying Red Number Badges on iPhone App Icons

The “Show Desktop” Button Is Now a Tiny Line

In Windows 11, you now have to click on a teeny-tiny sliver of a line in a similar location to show the desktop. The line will only appear if you hold your mouse cursor over it. In Windows 12, will this “button” become a single pixel in size? Stay tuned!

RELATED: How to Quickly Show Your Desktop on Windows 10

The “Notification Area” Is Hidden in an “Overflow Area”

In previous versions of Windows, apps could create special status icons in a Notification Area (often called the “system tray”) on the far-right side of the taskbar beside the clock. In the Windows 11 Preview, all of these icons are permanently hidden behind a small carat arrow located just to the left of the Quick Settings button. In Settings, Microsoft calls this the “overflow area.” There’s currently no way to show them on the taskbar.

RELATED: Did You Know? Windows Has Never Had a “System Tray”

Other Miscellaneous Taskbar Changes

Aside from the changes listed above, there are even more according to Microsoft and our testing.

There’s no Search box in the taskbar. There’s no Cortana button in the taskbar. There’s no News and Interests button. This has been replaced with a widgets button. There’s no “People” option in the taskbar. Clicking the date and time shows a list of your notifications as well as a calendar. When Focus Assist is enabled, you’ll see a crescent moon icon beside the clock. Apps are no longer allowed to customize areas of the taskbar (although this didn’t happen often in Windows 10).

That’s quite a few changes if you think about it, proving that Windows 11 is a substantial new version of Windows and not just a cosmetic revision to Windows 10. Even some of the taskbar restrictions put in place seem to be aimed at improving usability, perhaps in touch or tablet mode. Only time will tell how the taskbar will change before the full release of Windows 11 this fall.

RELATED: Windows 11: What’s New In Microsoft’s New OS