How to Change the Limit Reservable Bandwidth in Windows 11/10 [Guide]
How to Change the Limit Reservable Bandwidth in Windows 11/10 [Guide]
By default, Microsoft reserves the right to limit network bandwidth by as much as 80% to accommodate system activities. You have the power to change this setting, if you need to.
Whether it is through Ethernet or over Wi-Fi, download and upload speeds are vitally important to the overall performance of your Windows 10 PC. The sooner you can pull down a large file from the cloud to start work on it, the more productive you will be. Therefore, any tweak you can make to squeeze more performance out of your network communications has got make your life better—right?
Issues addressed in this tutorial:
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Your ISP (internet service provider) controls your internet bandwidth. You have little control over the bandwidth your ISP gives you, bar changing which package you're on. However, you can also use a built-in Windows setting that influences your internet speed.
In this guide, we explain what limit reservable bandwidth is, how it influences your internet connection speed, how to change it, and if changing it is a good idea.
This tutorial will apply for computers, laptops, desktops, and tablets running the Windows 10 and Windows 11 operating systems (Home, Professional, Enterprise, Education) from all supported hardware manufactures, like Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo, Alienware, Razer, MSI, Huawei , Microsoft Surface, and Samsung.