Remove an app from Settings or Control Panel, then clear leftovers so your PC stays clean, stable, and easier to manage.
Uninstalling software on Windows 10 sounds simple, until it isn’t. Maybe the app vanishes but leaves a stubborn entry behind. Maybe “Uninstall” throws an error. Maybe the program keeps running in the background and won’t let go.
This walkthrough covers the clean, normal way to remove apps, plus the fixes that work when Windows won’t cooperate. You’ll also learn how to spot leftover files safely, so you don’t break other apps or Windows itself.
Before You Uninstall, Do This First
A clean uninstall starts with a minute of prep. Skip this and you can run into stuck uninstallers, missing files, or a program that reappears after a reboot.
Close The App And Stop Background Tasks
Quit the program like you normally would. Then check the taskbar tray (near the clock) for icons that keep running after you close the window. Right-click and exit if you see one.
If the uninstall fails or the app won’t close, open Task Manager (Ctrl + Shift + Esc), find the app under Processes, then end the task. After that, try uninstalling again.
Save Work And Note Any Licenses
If it’s a paid app, check whether you need to deactivate a license inside the app before you remove it. Some software ties activations to a device and expects you to free one up first.
Use An Admin Account When Possible
Many desktop programs install system-wide components. If you’re on a standard account, Windows can block removal. If you can, uninstall while signed into an administrator account.
How To Uninstall A Program In Windows 10 Using Settings
Settings is the smoothest option for most apps, including many desktop programs and Store apps. It also gives you a quick view of what’s installed and how much space it uses.
Uninstall From Apps & Features
- Open Start and select Settings.
- Go to Apps.
- Select Apps & features (or Installed apps, depending on your Windows 10 build).
- Scroll or search for the app.
- Select it, then choose Uninstall.
- Follow the prompts from the app’s own uninstaller.
If you want Microsoft’s step list to match your exact Windows menus, this official page lays out the same paths in plain language: Uninstall or remove apps and programs in Windows.
What To Expect When You Click Uninstall
Some uninstallers open a separate wizard. Others remove instantly. A few will offer “Repair” and “Modify” options too. If the app is misbehaving and you plan to keep it, repair is worth trying. If you’re removing it for good, choose uninstall and complete the wizard.
Why Some Apps Won’t Uninstall From Settings
Windows 10 includes built-in apps that are part of the system image. Settings may block uninstall for these. Some third-party apps also register in a way that Settings can’t handle cleanly. When that happens, Control Panel often works better.
Uninstall From The Start Menu When You Just Want It Gone
This is the fastest route for many apps. It’s also handy when you don’t know the app’s exact name in Settings.
- Open Start.
- Find the app in the list (or type its name to search).
- Right-click the app.
- Select Uninstall.
If the click takes you to Settings, finish the uninstall there. If it opens Control Panel, follow the prompts in the next section.
Uninstall Desktop Programs From Control Panel
Control Panel is still the most reliable place to remove classic desktop software. If you installed a program from a downloaded installer (.exe or .msi), it usually shows up here.
Use Programs And Features
- Type Control Panel in the taskbar search and open it.
- Select Programs.
- Open Programs and Features.
- Find the program in the list.
- Select it, then choose Uninstall (or Uninstall/Change).
- Follow the on-screen steps until it finishes.
Pick The Right Entry When A Program Shows Up Twice
You might see two entries that look similar, like an app plus a “helper,” “runtime,” or “update” component. If you’re not sure, click each entry once and read the publisher name and install date. Remove the main app first. If a component is clearly tied to that app and you don’t use anything else that needs it, remove it after.
Table: Uninstall Methods And When To Use Each
Use this as a quick chooser. If your first attempt fails, move to the next method in the list.
| Method | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Settings > Apps | Most apps, many Store installs | Good default choice; shows size and install list |
| Start Menu Uninstall | Fast removal when you can find the app tile | May redirect to Settings or Control Panel |
| Control Panel > Programs And Features | Classic desktop programs | Often works when Settings fails |
| In-App Uninstaller | Programs with their own uninstall option | Look for “Uninstall” in the app’s folder or menu |
| Safe Mode Uninstall | Apps that won’t uninstall while running services | Limits background processes that block removal |
| Microsoft Troubleshooter | Broken uninstall entries, registry issues | Fixes removal blocks and corrupted uninstall keys |
| Reinstall Then Uninstall | Missing uninstaller files | Replaces deleted components, then remove cleanly |
| Manual Cleanup After Uninstall | Leftover folders, cached settings | Do after removal, not before |
When Uninstall Fails: Fix The Usual Causes
If Windows refuses to uninstall a program, it’s usually one of three things: the app is still running, the uninstaller is damaged, or Windows has a broken uninstall record. The fixes below match those patterns.
Try A Reboot First
A reboot clears locked files and stops stray processes that keep an uninstall from completing. After restarting, uninstall before opening lots of other apps.
Run The Uninstaller As Administrator
If you’re uninstalling from a program folder (like an unins000.exe file) or an app provides its own uninstaller, right-click it and choose Run as administrator. Then follow the prompts.
Reinstall The Program, Then Remove It
If the uninstaller complains that files are missing, reinstalling over the top can restore the uninstall components. Use the same installer version when you can. After reinstall finishes, uninstall again through Settings or Control Panel.
Use Safe Mode For Stubborn Services
Some apps install services that start with Windows. That can keep files locked. Safe Mode starts Windows with fewer background pieces running, which often frees the uninstall.
- Open Settings > Update & Security > Recovery.
- Under Advanced startup, select Restart now.
- Go to Troubleshoot > Advanced options > Startup Settings.
- Select Restart, then choose Safe Mode.
- Try uninstalling again from Settings or Control Panel.
After you’re done, restart normally to return to your standard Windows startup.
Use Microsoft’s Uninstall Troubleshooter When Entries Are Broken
If you see errors like “This action is only valid for products that are currently installed,” or the app appears in the list but won’t remove, the uninstall record can be damaged. Microsoft provides a tool that repairs uninstall and install blocks, including certain registry key issues.
Get it from Microsoft here: Fix problems that block programs from being installed or removed.
After you run it, pick Uninstalling, select the program from the list (or enter it manually if it isn’t listed), then let the tool apply repairs. When it finishes, try the uninstall again.
Clean Up Leftovers Without Breaking Anything
Even a normal uninstall can leave traces behind. Most of the time that’s harmless. Sometimes it wastes disk space or leaves settings that you’d rather remove. The goal is to clean what’s clearly tied to the app, and leave shared components alone.
Check For Leftover Folders In Two Common Places
After uninstalling, look in these folders for leftovers that match the app name or publisher name:
- C:\Program Files and C:\Program Files (x86)
- C:\Users\YourName\AppData (Local and Roaming)
If you find a folder that clearly belongs to the removed app, you can delete it. If you’re unsure, leave it. Shared folders like “Microsoft Visual C++” style runtimes are not safe targets for manual deletion.
Clear Startup Entries That Keep Coming Back
Some apps leave a startup entry even after removal. Open Task Manager, go to Startup, and disable items that match the program you removed. Disabling is safer than deleting, and it’s reversible.
Use Disk Cleanup For Temporary Files
Disk Cleanup won’t remove program folders, but it does clear old temp files that builds up over time. Search for Disk Cleanup, run it, select your system drive, then check temporary file categories you’re comfortable removing.
Table: Common Uninstall Errors And Practical Fixes
If you hit one of these messages, match it to the fix and retry the uninstall right away.
| What You See | Why It Happens | What To Try Next |
|---|---|---|
| “Uninstall” does nothing | Installer UI failed or process is stuck | Reboot, then uninstall before opening other apps |
| “The feature you are trying to use is on a network resource…” | Uninstaller can’t find original installer files | Reinstall the app, then uninstall again |
| “This action is only valid for products that are currently installed” | Uninstall record is damaged | Run Microsoft’s uninstall troubleshooter |
| “You do not have sufficient access” | Permission issue | Sign in as admin, then uninstall from Control Panel |
| Uninstall fails because files are in use | Background task or service is locking files | End task in Task Manager, then retry; use Safe Mode if needed |
| Program disappears but entry stays in the list | Leftover uninstall entry | Run Microsoft’s uninstall troubleshooter to remove the broken entry |
| Store app won’t remove | Store cache or install state glitch | Restart, try again in Settings; sign out/in to Microsoft Store if it’s a Store install |
Special Cases: Built-In Apps, Drivers, And Security Tools
Not every “program” behaves the same. These cases need a little extra care.
Built-In Windows Apps
Windows 10 includes apps that are part of the system. Some can be removed, some can’t. If Settings blocks uninstall, it’s often by design. If you removed something you miss, the Microsoft Store can reinstall many built-in apps.
Hardware Drivers And Utilities
For driver-related software (graphics, printers, audio), remove the vendor utility first through Programs and Features, then restart. If you’re removing a device completely, unplug it after uninstall and reboot. Windows may install a basic driver again once the device is detected, which is normal.
Antivirus And Security Suites
Some security programs use self-protection features that block removal while active. Use their built-in uninstall route from Control Panel, then restart. If it still resists, Safe Mode is often the cleanest next try.
A Simple Checklist For A Clean Uninstall
- Close the app and end its tasks in Task Manager.
- Uninstall from Settings first.
- If Settings fails, uninstall from Control Panel.
- Restart Windows 10.
- Delete obvious leftover folders that match the removed app.
- Disable leftover startup entries tied to that app.
- If entries are broken or errors persist, run Microsoft’s uninstall troubleshooter.
That’s it. Most removals take two minutes when the uninstall record is healthy, and the fixes above cover the cases that waste time.
References & Sources
- Microsoft.“Uninstall or remove apps and programs in Windows.”Official steps for uninstalling apps via Start, Settings, and Control Panel.
- Microsoft.“Fix problems that block programs from being installed or removed.”Explains and provides the Program Install and Uninstall troubleshooter for removal and install errors.
