Windows 11 Update Issue kb5066835-x64_2f193bc50987a9c27e42eceeb90648af19cc813a

Mohsen Mirab

New Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2025
Messages
2
Hi everyone. Here is an easy solution and it worked for me perfectly.
For Widows 11 Home, Version: 24H2, OS build:26100.7019 (You may find these details under System --->About)

Just do the following step by step;
1-Settings
2-Windows Update
3-Advanced Options
4-Scrowl down to Additional options
5-Recovery
6- Fix problems using Windows Update
7-Click Reinstall now (This process may take from 30 minutes to 2 hours depening on your system hardware specification)
8-Restart your computer
9-Check for updates
 
Solution
Thanks Mohsen — nice clear write-up and glad it worked for you. I’ll tidy your steps and add a few quick tips people often ask for.
What you posted (cleaned up)
  1. Settings → Windows Update
  2. Advanced options
  3. Scroll down to Additional options → Recovery
  4. Fix problems using Windows Update → Click Reinstall now
  5. Wait (may take 30 minutes → 2 hours depending on hardware)
  6. Restart the PC when prompted
  7. After restart: Settings → Windows Update → Check for updates
Notes, verification, and safety
  • This process effectively reinstalls/repairs the update-related components so it fixes many corrupt-cache or component failures.
  • Recommended before you start: plug the PC into power, make a quick backup (or at least ensure...
Thanks Mohsen — nice clear write-up and glad it worked for you. I’ll tidy your steps and add a few quick tips people often ask for.
What you posted (cleaned up)
  1. Settings → Windows Update
  2. Advanced options
  3. Scroll down to Additional options → Recovery
  4. Fix problems using Windows Update → Click Reinstall now
  5. Wait (may take 30 minutes → 2 hours depending on hardware)
  6. Restart the PC when prompted
  7. After restart: Settings → Windows Update → Check for updates
Notes, verification, and safety
  • This process effectively reinstalls/repairs the update-related components so it fixes many corrupt-cache or component failures.
  • Recommended before you start: plug the PC into power, make a quick backup (or at least ensure File History/OneDrive backups are up-to-date), and save any open work.
  • To verify the specific update installed: Settings → Windows Update → Update history → look under “Quality updates” for KB5066835 (or the KB you were targeting). You can also open PowerShell and run Get-HotFix to list installed updates.
If the reinstall doesn’t fix it, next troubleshooting steps
  • Run the built-in Windows Update troubleshooter: Settings → System → Troubleshoot → Other troubleshooters → Windows Update.
  • Run SFC and DISM from an elevated PowerShell / Command Prompt:
    • sfc /scannow
    • DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth
  • Reset update components manually (stop wuauserv/bits, rename SoftwareDistribution and Catroot2 folders) or try a Clean Boot and re-run Update.
  • Manually download/install the update from the Microsoft Update Catalog if automatic install fails.
  • If you want logs: open an elevated PowerShell and run Get-WindowsUpdateLog to create the readable WindowsUpdate.log on your desktop.
How to undo if something goes wrong
  • Use System Restore (if you have restore points) or uninstall the problematic update: Settings → Windows Update → Update history → Uninstall updates.
  • If the reinstall created worse issues, boot to Advanced Startup (Settings → Recovery → Advanced startup) and use Troubleshoot → Reset or System Restore.
Would you like me to:
  • turn your post into a short sticky/how‑to for the thread, or
  • post the exact SFC/DISM/Reset steps so others can copy-paste?
Thanks again — this is a helpful solution for anyone hitting a stuck Windows Update.
 
Solution
Good catch, Mohsen — that’s correct.
  • The Settings → System → Recovery → Fix problems using Windows Update → Reinstall now option performs a reinstall/repair of the current Windows version and “preserves all your apps, documents, and settings.”
  • A couple of quick caveats from Microsoft: the feature is for Windows 11 (22H2 or later with the Feb‑2024 optional update or newer) and may be unavailable on managed/work or school devices. Also keep the PC plugged into power and online while it runs.
Nice addition to your post — I’ll incorporate that line so others know apps/files/settings are preserved. Would you like me to add a short “backup before you start” reminder as well?