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February 9·Updated February 17

How to Disable Background Apps in Windows (Free 100-300MB RAM)

TL;DR
Windows runs dozens of background apps you never asked for — Copilot, Widgets, news feeds, telemetry — consuming 100–300MB of RAM and 5–15% CPU before you open anything. Disabling them in Settings → Apps → Startup and Background apps frees those resources immediately.

Quick Answers

Common questions answered at a glance
What are background apps?
Programs that keep running even after you close them. They sit in the background using RAM, CPU, and network bandwidth without showing a window. Common culprits: Copilot, Widgets, telemetry services, OneDrive, and bloatware like Candy Crush. Together, these can eat 100–300 MB of RAM and 5–15% of your CPU.
You close an app and assume it’s gone. It’s not. Most Windows apps don’t actually stop when you close them — they minimize to the background and keep running. Syncing data, checking for updates, sending telemetry, burning through RAM you didn’t know was being used. And they do this forever, from the moment you boot up, whether you ever open them again or not.This is one of the main reasons your PC feels slower over time. Not because your hardware degraded — because every app you’ve ever installed left behind a background process that’s still running.
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This guide explains which background apps eat the most resources, what they’re actually doing, and how to turn them off safely — with specific numbers so you know exactly what you’re getting back.RAM. Bloatware apps use 100–300 MB. Widgets add another 100–150 MB. Copilot uses its own share. According to Digital Trends, Windows 11 alone eats 2–4 GB of RAM on an 8 GB system at idle — and up to 8–10 GB on machines with 32 GB, largely because services like SysMain preload apps into memory whether you asked for them or not. Stack a few extra background apps on top, and a budget system runs out fast. When your RAM fills up, Windows starts using your hard drive as overflow — that’s called paging, and it’s about 100 times slower. You feel it as stuttering, frozen windows, and slow app switching.CPU. Background tasks chew through 5–15% of your CPU during telemetry updates, sync operations, and data collection. On a beefy desktop, you might not notice. On a budget laptop, those cycles directly translate to frame drops, input lag, and sluggish app switching.Network. Telemetry sends data to Microsoft while you’re gaming. Windows Update downloads files during your online matches. Both compete for your internet connection. Even a small background download can spike your ping from 30 ms to 200 ms.Battery. More CPU activity means more power draw. On a laptop, that’s shorter battery life, full stop. Disabling unnecessary background apps can add significant extra minutes — especially on budget laptops where every watt counts.A single background app can cost you more frames than you’d expect. In December 2024, Tom’s Hardware senior editor Jarred Walton tested the NVIDIA App — a common background utility installed by default with NVIDIA drivers — on a Ryzen 7 9800X3D with an RTX 4060 running Windows 11. With the app running in the background using default settings, game performance dropped by an average of 6% at 1080p. In Assassin’s Creed Mirage, the hit was even steeper: 9% at 1080p medium and 12% at 1080p ultra. One user with an RTX 4080 Super reported up to 15% loss in Black Myth: Wukong.The root cause was surprising. The NVIDIA App’s Game Filters feature was silently intercepting every frame — even when no filters were active. Disabling the feature restored performance to the exact same level as not having the app installed at all. Textbook example of how a single background process, one most people don’t even think about, can quietly steal real performance.Now multiply that across every background app on your system. Telemetry services, Widgets, Copilot, bloatware, overlay tools — each one adds a small tax. On a high-end system, you might not feel it. On a budget PC or laptop, that’s the difference between smooth and stuttery.Bloatware (Consumer Experiences). Windows automatically installs apps you didn’t ask for — Candy Crush, Flipboard, various promotional software. They take up 500 MB–2 GB of disk space and use 100–300 MB of RAM. The frustrating part? They come back after major Windows updates. You uninstall them, and they quietly reinstall themselves. Our Copilot & Bloatware guide covers the full list of what Windows installs, how to remove it all, and how to stop it from coming back.Telemetry. Windows sends usage data and crash reports to Microsoft in the background. It tracks what apps you use, when you use them, how they crash, and even typing patterns. Brian Burgess at XDA Developers lists telemetry among the top background services to disable, noting that the Connected User Experiences and Telemetry service causes CPU and disk usage spikes that directly impact system responsiveness. Our telemetry guide walks through reducing it to the minimum.Windows Widgets. The taskbar panel for news, weather, and stocks. Runs in the background using 100–150 MB of RAM even when you never open it. If you check the weather on your phone anyway, Widgets is just wasting resources.Windows Copilot and AI features. Microsoft’s AI assistant sits in your taskbar and background, reading documents and sending data to Microsoft’s cloud. There are now over 13 AI features running by default in Windows 11 — each one consuming resources you never opted into. Removing Copilot frees up RAM and stops the AI data collection. You can still use ChatGPT or any AI tool in your browser.OneDrive. Cloud storage that auto-starts and syncs in the background. XDA Developers found OneDrive is one of the top 6 background apps quietly killing laptop performance, noting it’s one of the first things to disable on a new Windows install if you don’t actively use cloud backups.Xbox Game Bar. Consumes 200–400 MB of RAM and adds 18–23 ms of input latency even when you’ve never opened it. Our Game Bar & DVR guide covers this one in detail.For individual apps: Settings → Apps → Installed Apps. Click the three-dot menu next to any app, select Advanced Options, and under “Background apps permissions,” set it to “Never.” Do this for anything you don’t need running 24/7.For bloatware: Go to Settings → Apps → Installed Apps. Find apps you didn’t install — Candy Crush, Clipchamp, TikTok, Instagram. Click the three-dot menu and Uninstall. Then block Consumer Experiences to stop them from reinstalling — our bloatware guide explains how.For telemetry: Settings → Privacy & Security → Diagnostics & Feedback. Switch “Send optional diagnostic data” to Off. For the deeper dive, our telemetry & location guide covers every toggle.For Widgets: Settings → Personalization → Taskbar → toggle Widgets off.For Copilot: Settings → Personalization → Taskbar → toggle Copilot off. That hides the button, but for full removal including the registry-level disable, see our Copilot removal walkthrough.For startup apps: Background apps and startup apps overlap a lot. Many of the same offenders load at boot AND run in the background. Our startup optimization guide covers which programs to disable from auto-launching.Always safe:• Consumer Experiences / bloatware — Promotional apps you never asked for. Remove them.• Telemetry — Safe unless you’re testing Windows preview builds.• Widgets — Weather and news are available in any browser.• Copilot — Browser-based AI tools work as alternatives.• Xbox Game Bar — Use NVIDIA ShadowPlay or OBS if you need recording.Think twice:• OneDrive — Only if you actually use cloud backups. Disabling it means files won’t sync automatically.• Location services — Keep if you use Find My Device on a laptop.• Clipboard history — Useful for creators who copy/paste a lot, but don’t copy passwords with it on.Be honest about what you actually use vs. what’s just running by default. Everything here is fully reversible — you can re-enable any app the same way you disabled it.Background apps are just one piece of the puzzle. For the full picture:Why Is My PC So Slow? — The full symptom-by-symptom diagnosticCopilot & Bloatware — Every preinstalled app, all 13+ AI features, and how to remove them permanentlyStartup Optimization — Which programs to disable from loading at bootTelemetry & Location Tracking — What Windows collects and how to shut it offPower Plans — Stop Windows from throttling your CPU to save power

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