A few days ago, we showed you how to check your device’s UEFI BIOS firmware version in Windows 11. We said that UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) is a standard firmware interface created by the UEFI consortium, designed to replace the older BIOS (basic input/output system). It is designed to improve software interoperability and address the limitations of BIOS which has been used for decades. As of Windows 10, version 1703, Microsoft requires UEFI Specification version 2.3.1c to support the handoff of system control from the SoC firmware boot loader to the OS. If your device has UEFI BIOS chips and you want to boot into it and make changes, use the steps below to do that.
Boot into the device UEFI BIOS firmware settings using the keyboard shortcuts
Most devices will allow you to boot into its UEFI BIOS settings by pressing the Boot or BIOS menu keys. Pressing the correct key at the POST screen will launch the Boot or UEFI BIOS menu. Some of the keys that are used to boot into the Boot or BIOS menu are: Esc, Delete, F1, F2, F10, F11, or F12. Check your device’s manufacturer documents or website for information on how to boot into a device Boot or BIOS menu. On tablet devices, the Volume up or Volume down buttons may get you into the UEFI BIOS. Depending on your device, you may see a similar screen to the one below. Select BIOS Setup (F10) to boot to your device UEFI BIOS firmware. On the UEFI BIOS screen, make all necessary changes and save, then exit. Your device may have to reboot for some changes to apply.
Boot into device UEFI BIOS firmware via Advanced Startup (WinRE)
Another way one can boot into a device’s UEFI BIOS firmware settings is to use Windows Advanced Startup (WinRE) feature. To get there, click Start -> Settings -> System -> Recovery – Advanced Startup. Click the Restart now button to restart. When Windows boots into Advanced Startup, select Troubleshoot Then select Advance options. Finally, select UEFI Firmware Settings. Windows will reboot into your device’s UEFI BIOS settings.
Boot into your device UEFI BIOS firmware settings using commands
Alternatively, one can use Windows Command Prompt or PowerShell to boot into a device’s UEFI BIOS firmware settings. To do that, open the Windows Terminal app with either the Command Prompt or Windows PowerShell. Then run the commands below. That should do it! Reference: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/bringup/unified-extensible-firmware-interface Conclusion: This post showed you how to boot into a device’s UEFI BIOS firmware settings when using Windows 11. If you find any error above or have something to add, please use the comment form below.