Windows 11 just fixed one of Search’s dumbest limitations, and you’ll wonder how you lived without it
If you have ever typed two letters into the Windows 11 search box, paused, and watched nothing useful happen until you added more characters, you already know exactly why this Windows 11 update matters.
Microsoft’s June 2026 Patch Tuesday update, part of a release Windows Latest calls the biggest of the year (via Windows Latest), quietly fixes that. Windows Search can now find and prioritize files with as few as two characters, down from the old three-character minimum.
Microsoft / Digital Trends
So what exactly changed in Windows Search?
Before this update, typing two letters from the file name didn’t do anything useful. You had to add a third or more characters before Windows even started looking. Even then, your file could get buried under web results and app suggestions.
Now, typing two characters is enough to trigger a meaningful search. The update also improves how results are ranked, so your actual file shows up near the top instead of getting lost beneath links and Copilot suggestions.
Zac Bowden / X
Why does dropping one character actually matter?
Most of us name files with short, practical labels. Personally, dealing with a couple dozen files on a daily basis, I often name them with a couple of characters like Q3 or V2, exactly the kind of names that used to be functionally invisible to search.
One fewer required character sounds small at first, but it removes a tiny, constant friction that builds up every single time you search for something on your PC. It is the kind of fix that feels obvious only once you have it, one that should have shipped years ago.
This change ships in KB5094126 for Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2.