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How to Use Widgets in Windows 11

Here's how to customize widgets in Windows 11 for at-a-glance access to the stuff you use most.

 & Jason Cohen Senior Editor, Help & How To

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If you like the News and Interests panel in Windows 10, you'll feel right at home with the Widgets panel in Windows 11. Use it to search the web, read trending news, check the weather, view photos, or get sports updates with a click of a mouse (or swipe of your finger).

While the widgets are primarily powered by Microsoft's own services, the plan is to also incorporate widgets from third parties and publishing partners. Windows 11 will start you off with a specific configuration, but you are free to customize the panel to your liking.


Open Widget Panel

open widgets

Open the widget panel by clicking the Widgets icon on the taskbar; it looks like two rectangles. If you have a touch-screen device, swipe from the left side of the screen to open the panel.

From here, you can access a Bing-powered web search bar and several Microsoft-powered widgets. For instance, the To Do widget is powered by Microsoft To Do and the Calendar widget is backed by Outlook. Continue scrolling to see a curated selection of news articles that align with your Microsoft news preferences.


Change Widget Size

widget size

Click the ellipsis button inside a widget to change its size. Choose between small, medium, and large sizes to create a bigger widget that shows more information or a smaller widget that scales down what is visible at a glance.


Customize Widgets

customize widget

Some widgets also have additional configurations you can change if you click the ellipsis button and select Customize widget from the menu. For example, the Weather and Traffic widgets allow you to change your location, Sports lets you add teams to follow, and Watchlist allows you to pin stock listings.


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Move Widgets

move widgets

Reorganize your widgets by dragging them to new locations. Hover your mouse over the top portion of a widget until the cursor becomes a hand. Grab the window and then drag it to the new location; surrounding widgets should move to accommodate the change.


Add or Remove Widgets

add widgets

To add new widgets, click the profile icon in the top-right corner of the panel (or click the Add widgets button under the currently pinned widgets). You can then click any of the listed widgets to add them to the panel. Remove a pinned widget by clicking its ellipsis button and choosing Remove widget from the menu.


Adjust News Feed

news feed

There are a few actions you can take to adjust your news feed. If you don't want to see a certain story, click the X button to hide the story. Windows will ask you why, allowing you to change your interests, hide the publisher, report an issue, or undo the action. Click the ellipsis button for a news story to request to see more or fewer stories like the current one. If you select the latter, you can further define your interests.


Manage Your Interests

msn interests

To manage your interests, click the profile icon and select Manage your news and interest at the bottom of the window (or select Manage interests from the ellipsis window of a specific article). This will open the My Interests page of Microsoft News in your web browser. Here, you can select the topics that interest you under categories like News, Entertainment, Sports, Shopping, and more. You can also manage the list of publishers you have followed or hidden.


Tune Your News Feed

publishers

You can quickly adjust your news feed under the My Interests section of the Microsoft News website. Click the Tune your feed link at the bottom of the sidebar to open a window of publishers. Scroll through the different screens and click on the publishers you wish to appear in your news feed going forward.

About Our Expert

Jason Cohen

Jason Cohen

Senior Editor, Help & How To

My Experience

As PCMag's editor of how to content, I have to cover a wide variety of topics and also make our stories accessible to everyday users. Considering my history as a technical writer, copywriter, and all-around freelancer covering baseball, comics, and more at various outlets, I am used to making myself into an expert.

I believe tech corporations are bad, but you might as well know how to use technology in everyday life. Want more how to content delivered right to your inbox? Sign up for the tips and tricks newsletter that I curate twice a week.

The Technology I Use

My job as how-to guru means I use just about every gadget under the sun, so I can figure out how everything works. I work from a Lenovo ThinkPad running Windows 11, but also have a very large Dell Inspiron 17 3000 and Apple silicon MacBook. I also have a Google Pixel 6a for personal use and use a Galaxy Z Flip 4 for additional Samsung-related testing. For iOS coverage, an iPhone 13 mini works like a charm, though it's already becoming a little long in the tooth.

My desktop situation includes a dual monitor setup with a modest Acer monitor. I also use a Logitech mouse (who can use these ThinkPad trackpads) and a Havit keyboard (my first mechanical keyboard; I love it but my wife hates it!). I'm a recent convert from wired headphones; I have Anker Soundcore Liberty Air wireless earbuds for personal use and have taken to the Sennheiser HD 450BT headphones for work.

Whenever I have a second to myself, I'm probably gaming on my Nintendo Switch, Steam Deck, or Xbox Series S. I also still have a bunch of classic consoles lying around as well.

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