
Microsoft Confirms Windows 12 Won’t Be Announced at Build 2026
Despite months of speculation, Microsoft has officially confirmed that it will not unveil Windows 12 during its Build 2026 developer conference.
The statement comes after widespread rumors suggested the company was preparing to introduce a successor to Windows 11, fueled by teaser campaigns hinting at a major shift in the PC industry.
Microsoft Shuts Down Windows 12 Rumors
Pavan Davuluri, President of Microsoft’s Windows and Devices division, addressed the speculation directly on social media ahead of Build 2026.
“Something new is coming for developers. And no, it’s not a new OS version,” Davuluri wrote, effectively ending expectations that Windows 12 would debut during the conference.
The clarification suggests Microsoft remains focused on evolving Windows 11 rather than launching a completely new operating system in the near future.
Focus Shifts to Arm-Based Windows PCs
Instead of a new Windows release, industry attention is turning toward Microsoft’s growing partnership with Arm-based hardware vendors.
According to reports, Build 2026 is expected to highlight efforts involving Microsoft, Nvidia and MediaTek to bring higher-performance gaming, AI processing and professional workloads to Arm-powered Windows devices.
The initiative aligns with Microsoft’s recent messaging around a “new era of the PC,” a phrase that has also been echoed by Nvidia, Arm and MediaTek in recent months.
Surface Laptop Ultra Expected to Showcase New Hardware
One of the most anticipated announcements is expected to be the new Surface Laptop Ultra, reportedly powered by Nvidia’s upcoming Arm-based N1X processor.
The N1X chip is being developed through a collaboration between NVIDIA and MediaTek and is designed to compete directly with premium laptop platforms from Apple, Intel and AMD.
Microsoft claims the new device will combine:
- Nvidia Blackwell RTX graphics
- Up to 128GB of unified memory
- Full CUDA support
- Local AI capabilities for models up to 120 billion parameters
- Advanced gaming and content creation performance
The company describes the system as a platform capable of handling AI development, 3D rendering and large-scale creative workloads simultaneously.
AI and Gaming Expected to Dominate Build 2026
Artificial intelligence remains a central focus of Microsoft’s strategy, and Build 2026 is expected to showcase how AI workloads can run locally on next-generation Windows hardware rather than relying exclusively on cloud services.
Gaming performance is also likely to play a major role, particularly as Microsoft seeks to strengthen Windows on Arm and challenge Apple’s growing influence in premium laptop computing.
What It Means for Windows Users
For everyday users, the biggest takeaway is straightforward: Windows 12 is not arriving this week.
While Microsoft continues to develop Windows 11 through regular feature updates and AI-driven enhancements, the company’s immediate priorities appear focused on hardware innovation, Arm adoption and local AI performance rather than launching a new operating system generation.
Any future Windows 12 announcement, if it exists at all, will have to wait for another day.

