Windows License Transfer Site

If you need to move Windows to new hardware and your current license is OEM, you have two honest options: buy a new retail license for the new PC, or keep the old PC as-is and use the new one unactivated (with cosmetic limitations only).

VL licenses are transferable between devices owned by the same organization , but not to external individuals. Microsoft requires re-hosting rights documentation if moving to new hardware. D. Windows 7/8 Free Upgrade to Windows 10/11 If you upgraded for free from an OEM Win7/8 license, the resulting Win10/11 license inherits the original OEM binding —meaning it’s not transferable. If you upgraded from a retail Win7/8 license, the Win10/11 license remains retail and transferable. 3. Technical Mechanism of License Binding Microsoft uses three main systems to tie a license to hardware: windows license transfer

You may deactivate the license on the old PC and activate it on a new one. There is no limit on the number of transfers, but the license can only be active on one PC at a time. If you need to move Windows to new

If you signed in with a Microsoft account, the license is stored in the cloud under your account. Transfer is done via the Activation Troubleshooter. C. Volume License (Enterprise/Education – Transferable within org) How it works: Organizations buy a KMS (Key Management Service) or MAK (Multiple Activation Key) to activate many machines. If it says OEM_DM or OEM_SLP

Is the license type? ├── OEM → NO (except motherboard replacement with identical model) ├── Retail → YES (unlimited transfers, one active PC at a time) ├── Volume → YES (within same organization, not to individuals) └── Upgrade from Win7/8 → Check original license type Before buying a used Windows key or attempting a transfer, always check the license type with slmgr /dli . If it says OEM_DM or OEM_SLP , the license is married to that motherboard—don’t expect a transfer to work.

OEM licenses are permanently bound to the original computer . If the motherboard dies, the license dies with it—legally and technically. Microsoft’s EULA explicitly states: “The license is not transferable to another device.”