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How to move the Windows 11 taskbar to the left or right side of the screen?

Henry Jackson 480 Reputation points
2023-09-14T22:28:44.7+00:00

I have a two-monitor computer setup and recently switched to Windows 11. In Windows 10, I could fix my taskbar to the left side of the screen on my left monitor, and the right side of the screen on my right monitor. However, I cannot find any way to move the taskbar from the center bottom position it holds in Windows 11. Can anyone please provide a solution to this problem? Thank you.

Windows for business | Windows Client for IT Pros | User experience | Other

Answer accepted by question author

  1. Erland Sommarskog 133.9K Reputation points MVP Volunteer Moderator
    2023-12-09T10:52:14.4366667+00:00

    You can do this in Windows 11 if you install ExplorerPatcher. Of course, you may be nervous of installing something that actually goes in an modifies explorer.exe. Since I just can't stand the centred taskbar in Windows 11, I have no choice. I recall that I have run into a case where Explorer did not start after a Windows update, and it was a bit of a panic until I was able to uninstall and re-install Explorerpatcher.

    Once you have installed ExplorerPatcher, you will get a Start-menu item for ExplorerPatcher. Select it, and you will find the option for the taskbar location.

    20+ people found this answer helpful.

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  1. Scott Helmers 3,780 Reputation points MVP Volunteer Moderator
    2023-12-10T22:24:33.45+00:00

    I downloaded and installed https://www.startallback.com/ about a week ago. It does allow moving the entire taskbar to any of the four edges of the monitor, among other functions. Though I can't provide a full endorsement, I haven't encountered any issues with it.

    10+ people found this answer helpful.

  2. Matt Wilson 55 Reputation points
    2025-08-13T08:25:51.27+00:00

    Microsoft - Add this Feature back to Windows 11!!!!

    9 people found this answer helpful.
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  3. Mark Weiss 91 Reputation points
    2025-03-10T16:46:17.18+00:00

    I'm staying on Windows 10 until this issue is resolved. I would have switched to LINUX if I could get my Adobe apps, electronic design apps, MIDI and film scanner hardware to work on LINUX, but unfortunately, only Windows and Mac OS work with the hardware and only Windows with some of the software.

    I can't express how nasty this is of Microsoft to cripple Windows with a debilitating restriction. It's almost like they're trying to cause us stress so we die earlier.

    6 people found this answer helpful.

  4. L A Williams 40 Reputation points
    2024-03-20T18:35:58.5566667+00:00

    I'm not sure why Microsoft removed a useful feature (again), but I assume it was some misguided attempt at UI/UX enhancement by a product engineer who wanted to "make things different," or move Windows toward a mobile-first design (bad, bad idea.) The only situation I can think of where this is good design is if you have a widescreen monitor (and who doesn't?) in portrait mode instead of landscape (and who does besides developers and editors?).

    There is apparently a registry hack to move it but it gets reset every time the system reboots

    6 people found this answer helpful.

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