You can change your Windows display language in just a few minutes through Settings > Time & Language > Language & region. This guide shows you exactly how to switch your interface language, add new languages, and troubleshoot common problems on Windows 10 and 11.
Why Change Your Windows Display Language?
Windows supports over 100 languages for its interface. You might want to change your display language if you’re more comfortable reading in another language, sharing your computer with family members who speak different languages, or learning a new language through immersion.
The display language controls everything you see in Windows: menus, settings, dialog boxes, and system apps. When you change it, File Explorer, Settings, the Start menu, and built-in applications all switch to your chosen language.
What You Need Before Starting
Before changing your display language, make sure you have:
- An active internet connection to download language packs
- Administrative rights on your Windows account
- At least 500 MB of free disk space for the language pack
- Windows Update enabled and working properly
Language packs typically range from 100 to 500 MB depending on the language. The download time varies based on your internet speed.

Step-by-Step Guide for Windows 11
Accessing Language Settings
- Click the Start button or press the Windows key
- Click Settings (the gear icon)
- Select Time & Language from the left sidebar
- Click Language & region
You can also reach this faster by typing “language settings” in the Windows search bar and clicking the top result.
Adding a New Display Language
Once you’re in Language & region settings:
- Click the Add a language button next to Preferred languages
- A window opens showing all available languages
- Type the language name in the search box or scroll through the list
- Click the language you want
- Click Next
Windows now shows optional language features. Make sure these boxes are checked:
- Display language: This makes Windows menus and settings appear in this language
- Speech recognition: Optional, for voice commands
- Text-to-speech: Optional, for reading text aloud
- Handwriting: Optional, for stylus input
Click Install. Windows downloads the language pack. This takes 5 to 15 minutes depending on your connection speed.
Setting Your New Language as Primary
After installation completes:
- Look for your new language in the Preferred languages list
- Click the three dots next to it
- Select Move up until it reaches the top position
- Click Sign out to apply changes
When you sign back in, Windows appears in your new language. All system menus, settings, and dialogs now use this language.
Important Notes for Windows 11
Windows 11 Home requires an internet connection during initial setup. If you’re setting up a new PC, you can choose your display language during the out-of-box experience before reaching the desktop.
Some languages require additional font packages. Windows downloads these automatically when needed.
Step-by-Step Guide for Windows 10
Opening Language Preferences
Windows 10 uses a slightly different path:
- Click the Start button
- Click Settings (gear icon)
- Select Time & Language
- Click Language from the left menu
The language preferences screen appears, showing your current Windows display language at the top.
Installing a Language Pack
To add a new language:
- Click Add a language under Preferred languages
- Browse or search for your language
- Select the language from the list
- Click Next
Check these options before installing:
- Set as my Windows display language: Check this box
- Install language pack: Must be selected
- Speech: Optional feature
- Handwriting: Optional feature
Click Install. The download begins immediately. A progress indicator shows the download and installation status.
Making the Language Active
After installation:
- The new language appears in your preferred languages list
- If you checked “Set as my Windows display language” during installation, it’s already marked as default
- If not, click the language and select Set as default
- Sign out and sign back in
Windows 10 now displays in your chosen language.
Regional Format Settings
While you’re in language settings, check the Regional format dropdown. This controls how Windows displays dates, times, and numbers. You can set this independently from your display language.
For example, you might want Windows in English but prefer European date formats (DD/MM/YYYY). Click Regional format and choose the format that matches your preference.
Managing Multiple Languages on Your Windows PC
Switching Between Languages Quickly
Once you have multiple languages installed, you can switch between them:
Using the Taskbar:
- Look for the language indicator in your system tray (bottom right)
- Click it to see all installed languages
- Select any language to switch your keyboard input
This changes your keyboard layout, not your display language. To change the display language, you still need to go through Settings.
Using Keyboard Shortcuts: Press Windows key + Spacebar to cycle through installed keyboard languages. This is faster than using the mouse.
Language Bar Options
If you don’t see the language indicator:
- Go to Settings > Time & Language > Typing
- Scroll down to Advanced keyboard settings
- Check “Use the desktop language bar when it’s available”
- Click Language bar options
- Choose Docked in the taskbar or Floating on Desktop
The language bar shows which input language is active and lets you switch quickly.
Removing Languages You Don’t Need
Unused languages take up disk space. To remove them:
- Open Settings > Time & Language > Language & region
- Find the language you want to remove
- Click the three dots next to it
- Select Remove
Windows uninstalls the language pack and frees up space. You can always reinstall it later if needed.
Changing Language for Specific Apps
Some applications let you choose their interface language independently from Windows. This is useful when you want Windows in one language but specific programs in another.
Microsoft Office Language Settings
Microsoft Office has its own language preferences:
- Open any Office app (Word, Excel, PowerPoint)
- Go to File > Options
- Select Language
- Under Office display language, click Add a language
- Choose your language and click Add
- Set it as default if you want
Office downloads its own language pack. This is separate from Windows language packs.
Web Browser Language Settings
Browsers like Chrome, Firefox, and Edge have independent language settings:
Microsoft Edge:
- Click the three dots in the top right
- Go to Settings > Languages
- Click Add languages
- Select and add your preferred language
- Click the three dots next to it and choose Display Microsoft Edge in this language
Google Chrome:
- Click three dots > Settings
- Select Languages from the left menu
- Click Add languages
- Choose your language and add it
- Click three dots next to the language and select Display Google Chrome in this language
Restart your browser for changes to take effect.
Application-Specific Languages
Many programs detect your Windows display language automatically. Some applications, especially professional software like Adobe Creative Suite or AutoCAD, have language switchers in their own preferences.
Check the application’s settings or preferences menu under a section called Language, Regional Settings, or Localization.
Troubleshooting Common Language Problems
Language Pack Won’t Download
If your language pack fails to download:
Check Windows Update:
- Go to Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update
- Click Check for updates
- Install any pending updates
- Restart your computer
- Try downloading the language pack again
Language packs distribute through Windows Update. If Windows Update is broken, language downloads fail.
Verify Internet Connection: Test your connection by opening a web browser and visiting a website. If you can browse normally, your connection works.
Clear Windows Update Cache:
- Press Windows key + R
- Type
services.mscand press Enter - Find Windows Update in the list
- Right-click it and select Stop
- Open File Explorer
- Navigate to C:\Windows\SoftwareDistribution
- Delete everything inside this folder
- Go back to services and start Windows Update
- Try downloading the language pack again
Display Language Option Greyed Out
Some Windows editions don’t support changing the display language:
- Windows 10/11 Home Single Language: These editions only support one display language
- Enterprise and Education editions with policies: Your organization might restrict language changes
To check your Windows edition:
- Press Windows key + Pause/Break
- Look under Windows specifications
- Check the Edition line
If you have Single Language edition, you need to upgrade to Home or Pro to change display languages. Contact Microsoft or your device manufacturer about upgrade options.
Partial Language Translation
After changing display language, some parts of Windows might still appear in English or your old language. This happens because:
- Third-party apps: These apps might not support your chosen language
- Incomplete language packs: Some languages have partial translations
- App updates needed: Update your apps to get their latest language files
To get more complete translations:
- Go to Settings > Time & Language > Language & region
- Click your display language
- Click the three dots and select Language options
- Under Related settings, click Download if you see this option
- Install any available language updates
Font and Character Display Issues
Some languages use special characters that require specific fonts. If you see boxes or question marks instead of text:
- Go to Settings > Time & Language > Language & region
- Click your language and select Language options
- Look for Supplemental fonts or Basic typing
- Click Download to install missing fonts
Windows usually installs these automatically, but sometimes you need to trigger the download manually.
Language Settings for Organizations and Workplaces
Deploying Language Packs Across Multiple Computers
IT administrators can push language settings through Group Policy or Microsoft Endpoint Manager. This ensures all computers in an organization use consistent language settings.
The Microsoft Deployment Toolkit allows pre-installation of language packs in Windows images. This saves time when deploying many computers.
User vs System Language Settings
Windows distinguishes between:
- System language: Affects the welcome screen, new user accounts, and system accounts
- User language: Only affects the currently signed-in user
To change system-wide language (requires administrator rights):
- Go to Settings > Time & Language > Language & region
- Click Administrative language settings
- Click Copy settings
- Check “Welcome screen and system accounts”
- Check “New user accounts”
- Click OK
This ensures everyone who uses the computer sees the same language.
Advanced Language Configuration Options
Installing Language Interface Packs
Language Interface Packs (LIPs) provide partial translations for languages that don’t have full language packs. LIPs translate the most commonly used Windows elements while keeping some parts in a base language.
LIPs are available through Windows Update just like full language packs. Follow the same installation process described earlier.
Changing System Locale for Non-Unicode Programs
Some older programs don’t display text correctly unless you change the system locale:
- Type “control panel” in Windows search and open it
- Click Clock and Region
- Click Region
- Go to the Administrative tab
- Click Change system locale
- Select your language from the dropdown
- Click OK
- Restart when prompted
This fixes character encoding issues in legacy applications. Modern programs shouldn’t need this setting.
Keyboard Layout Customization
Beyond changing languages, you can customize your keyboard layout:
- Go to Settings > Time & Language > Typing
- Click Advanced keyboard settings
- Click Language bar options
- Select Advanced Key Settings tab
- Choose actions for key combinations
You can set shortcuts for switching input languages or customize caps lock behavior.
Performance Impact of Multiple Languages
Each installed language pack uses disk space:
| Language Type | Approximate Size | Performance Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Display language pack | 100-500 MB | Minimal |
| Speech recognition | 50-150 MB | Low |
| Handwriting recognition | 50-100 MB | Low |
| Optical character recognition | 30-80 MB | Minimal |
Having multiple languages installed doesn’t slow down Windows. The language packs are only loaded when needed. However, if you’re running low on disk space, removing unused languages helps.
To check space used by languages:
- Go to Settings > System > Storage
- Click Temporary files
- Look at Language resources checkbox for size information
Keeping Your Language Packs Updated
Microsoft updates language packs through Windows Update. These updates improve translations, fix errors, and add support for new features.
To ensure your language packs stay current:
- Go to Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update
- Click Advanced options
- Turn on “Receive updates for other Microsoft products”
- Click Check for updates regularly
Language pack updates are usually small (under 100 MB) and install automatically with other Windows updates.
You can also manually check for language updates:
- Settings > Time & Language > Language & region
- Click your display language
- Select Language options
- If updates are available, you’ll see a Download button
According to Microsoft’s documentation on language packs at Microsoft’s Windows Language Support page, language updates typically release with major Windows updates and occasionally as standalone updates.
Privacy Considerations with Language Settings
When you add a language and enable features like speech recognition or handwriting, Windows might collect data to improve these features.
To review language-related privacy settings:
- Go to Settings > Privacy & security
- Click Speech
- Review and adjust online speech recognition
- Go back and click Inking & typing personalization
- Adjust settings based on your comfort level
You can use display languages without enabling these data collection features. Just uncheck optional features like speech recognition during language pack installation.
Summary
Changing your Windows display language is straightforward once you know where to look. Access language settings through Time & Language in Settings, add your preferred language, install the language pack, and set it as default. Sign out and back in to see Windows in your new language.
Remember these key points:
Most issues resolve by ensuring Windows Update works properly. Language packs download through this system. If downloads fail, troubleshoot Windows Update first.
You can install multiple languages and switch between them. Each user account can have different display language preferences.
Some Windows editions, particularly Single Language versions, don’t support changing display languages. Check your edition if the option appears greyed out.
Keep language packs updated through Windows Update for the best experience. Updates improve translations and fix display issues.
For deeper technical information about Windows language configuration and deployment options, Microsoft’s Deployment Image Servicing and Management documentation provides comprehensive guidance for advanced scenarios.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I change Windows language without internet?
You need internet to download language packs initially. Once downloaded and installed, you can switch between installed languages offline. If you’re setting up a new computer without internet, you can only choose from pre-installed languages until you connect.
Will changing display language delete my files?
No. Changing display language only affects how Windows interface appears. All your files, programs, and personal data remain untouched. You just need to sign out and back in for the change to take effect.
Why does my Windows 11 still show some English text?
Third-party applications might not support your chosen language. Additionally, some Windows features receive translation updates gradually. Check for Windows updates and application updates to get more complete translations. Some technical terms also remain in English across all languages by design.
Can different user accounts have different display languages?
Yes. Each Windows user account maintains its own language preference. One user can have Windows in Spanish while another user on the same computer uses English. Change language settings while signed into each account separately.
How do I switch back to English if I changed to a language I can’t read?
Look for the gear icon in the Start menu (Settings). Click the icon that looks like a clock or globe (Time & Language). Find the language list and move English to the top position. Sign out using the power icon. The interface returns to English after you sign back in. If completely lost, you can reset Windows language settings through Control Panel by typing “control” in search regardless of display language.
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