Microsoft purges Windows 11 printer drivers, putting millions of devices on borrowed time — legacy printers face extinction as Microsoft stops distributing V3 and V4 drivers

Windows 1 brochure scan
(Image credit: Brochure scanned by Swtpc6800)

Microsoft is preparing a major change to how printers are supported in Windows 11, pulling the plug on drivers that primarily support older hardware. Beginning with a non-security update that was released on January 15, Microsoft will no longer support legacy V3 and V4 printer drivers, which were announced as deprecated in September 2023, Windows Central reports.

The policy is part of broader plans to modernize the Windows print platform following the release of Windows 10 21H2, which removed the need for print device manufacturers to provide their own installers. Under these plans, users on Windows 11 or Windows Server 2025 and later will no longer be able to install new printer drivers via Windows Update.

This is ultimately a servicing and security decision. The traditional Windows print driver ecosystem has long since been a thorn in the side of Microsoft, with issues such as the print spooler vulnerability ‘PrintNightmare’ and the burden of supporting thousands of vendor-specific drivers making the entire ecosystem increasingly difficult to maintain. By narrowing what can be distributed via Windows Update, Microsoft is putting responsibility for legacy hardware support back in the hands of manufacturers.

From July 1, 2026, Windows will change its internal driver ranking order rules to “prefer” the built-in Microsoft IPP class driver when multiple options are available. A year later, on July 1, 2027, third-party printer driver updates delivered via Windows Update will be restricted to security-related fixes only.

With these changes, Microsoft also appears to be laying the groundwork for a harder lean on Windows Protected Print Mode, which was introduced with recent Windows 11 24H2 releases. When enabled, it removes third-party printer drivers entirely and restricts printing to Microsoft’s class drivers. While this is an optional feature for now, it hints at where Microsoft intends for the platform to go in the future.

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Luke James
Contributor
  • pjmelect
    This is not the first time they have done this and it is very anoying I have a perfectly good Brother laser printer which now does not install on Windows 10 so I have a Windows 7 partition just so I can use my printer.
    Reply
  • bill001g
    Microsoft is loaded with environmentalists who protest everything else. Why are they hiding under their desk when microsoft forces the creation of ewaste by dropping support. Window 10 being the largest offender.
    Reply
  • King_V
    pjmelect said:
    This is not the first time they have done this and it is very anoying I have a perfectly good Brother laser printer which now does not install on Windows 10 so I have a Windows 7 partition just so I can use my printer.
    Out of curiosity, which model? I've got a Brother MFC-8890DW, which I bought used prior to 2014, and it's got Windows 7 and (supposedly) Windows 10 drivers.

    If I recall correctly, either of those drivers will install fine in Windows 10. Haven't tried it on any Windows 11 systems, though. That said, digging into the folder structure of the Windows 10 installer seems to indicate that it's a Windows 8 driver.

    (Now that I think about it, I should see if my GF's Windows 11 laptop recognizes the printer)
    Reply
  • TechieTwo
    What would you expect from Microsucks?
    Reply
  • das_stig
    About time, an OS should have a something along the lines of DirectX for printers, apps don't care what they are printing too, it should be left up to the hardware how they interpreted the print job and render the final output.

    Finally Microsoft doing something right for Windows 11.
    Reply
  • LabRat 891
    das_stig said:
    About time, an OS should have a something along the lines of DirectX for printers, apps don't care what they are printing too, it should be left up to the hardware how they interpreted the print job and render the final output.

    Finally Microsoft doing something right for Windows 11.
    "Printing Standards" are probably one of the strongest examples in real life, of the XKCD comic (927)-
    https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/standards_2x.png
    Reply
  • ezst036
    pjmelect said:
    This is not the first time they have done this and it is very anoying I have a perfectly good Brother laser printer which now does not install on Windows 10 so I have a Windows 7 partition just so I can use my printer.
    Any time I have tried a Brother printer they work wonderfully on Linux.
    Reply
  • USAFRet
    ezst036 said:
    Any time I have tried a Brother printer they work wonderfully on Linux.
    And my brother printer works flawlessly in Windows. Both Win10 and 11.
    Reply
  • ezst036
    USAFRet said:
    And my brother printer works flawlessly in Windows. Both Win10 and 11.
    Is it older?

    OP mentioned Win7 so likely your printer model is much newer not older - IOW why wouldn't yours work(?) With the manufacturer providing current drivers on a current printer? 🤔

    Perhaps my inference about the age of their printer is incorrect but it seemed on point.
    Reply
  • blppt
    bill001g said:
    Microsoft is loaded with environmentalists who protest everything else.
    I'm pretty sure that doesn't apply to current Microsoft. Maybe a decade ago.
    Reply