Why Is Windows Not Detecting TPM Even Though It’s Enabled?

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Asked By TechWhiz99 On

I recently built my own PC and I'm using Windows 10 Home. When I tried to upgrade to Windows 11, I received a message saying that there's no TPM 2.0 in my system, even though it's enabled in the BIOS. I thought this might be due to a lag, so I toggled the TPM setting off, booted up, and then toggled it back on before rebooting again. Unfortunately, this didn't solve the issue. Has anyone else faced this problem? Is there a way to bypass TPM to install Windows 11 Home?

Update: I figured out the problem! I was inadvertently pressing 'N' when prompted to enter Y or N because I wasn't sure if my PC had BitLocker. I pressed 'Y' this time since I now know it does, and that resolved the issue.

2 Answers

Answered By ByteBandit42 On

Did you make sure your BIOS is generating the security keys like it should? Some Asus boards do this automatically, so it might not be the problem here, but checking it wouldn’t hurt.

Answered By GamerGuy64 On

You might want to try clearing the CMOS if you're still having issues. That sometimes helps with BIOS settings not registering correctly.

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