Microsoft is finally acknowledging what many Windows 11 users have felt for years, File Explorer can be slow in ways that a faster launch alone won’t fix.

The latest explanation from Microsoft points to a broader performance push for Windows 11 File Explorer, including changes aimed at startup behavior, disk activity, visual delays, and app hangs.

That matters because the pain shows up in everyday use. Folder navigation, thumbnails, context menus, and small pauses can all make Windows’ file manager feel heavier than it should.

Why faster starts still fall short

Microsoft’s disputed answer so far has been File Explorer preloading, which keeps key pieces of the app ready before you click the icon. The upside is clear, the window can appear faster because Windows has already done some of the work in the background.

But that fix has limits. According to a Windows Latest test, preloading adds roughly 35MB of RAM use, which isn’t much on a modern PC, but it still feeds the criticism that Microsoft is spending memory to cover for slow code.

The weakness shows up after the app opens. Large folders can still take time to populate, and right-click menus can still feel delayed. Microsoft’s latest response is more meaningful because it targets launch order, unnecessary visual work, disk reads, and hangs.

What changes inside File Explorer

Tali Roth, Microsoft’s Head of Product for Windows Shell, described the File Explorer plan as a combined approach, with startup improvements and engineering fixes moving in parallel.

When I talk about work we’re doing to make Windows more reliable, performant, and crafted, there’s been a category of comments that I will…politely 😉… summarize as “prove it”. No doubt we’ve got more to do, but excited to share what we’ve delivered so far! https://t.co/oKE94G8b0X

— Tali Roth 🪟 (@TeaAndDates) May 1, 2026

The Windows Shell team is aiming at the places users notice most. It’s improving load order, removing extra animations and unnecessary work, cutting disk reads, and reducing hangs across the app.

Those changes would reach the parts of File Explorer that preloading can’t clean up by itself. The real upgrade is a file manager that opens quickly, loads folders without sticky pauses, and keeps thumbnails and menus moving.

What to watch next

Microsoft says the File Explorer optimizations will roll out gradually over the coming months, so the real test is whether regular Windows 11 users notice the difference outside Insider builds.

There are early signs of progress. Recent builds have reportedly improved navigation, removed the bright flash that could appear in dark mode, and started replacing older File Explorer pieces with more modern Windows UI.

The timing for broad public availability isn’t pinned down in the source material. After the updates land, watch the ordinary moments, folder loading, thumbnail rendering, right-click menus, and general responsiveness. That’s where Microsoft has to prove Windows 11’s file manager is actually getting faster.

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