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How to Add Support for Another Language in Windows

Are you bilingual? Here’s how to use more than one language in Windows 10 and 11.

 & Lance Whitney Contributor

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Windows supports a variety of languages. If your computer is set up in English, but you wish to use Spanish, or French, or Greek, you can add multiple languages and then switch back and forth between them. This can be especially helpful if you are bilingual or are learning a second language and want to try using Windows with it.

Once you add another language to Windows 10 or Windows 11, the menus, title bars, and other elements of the operating system will change to display that language. Your keyboard will also change, so you can type the characters of the selected language. Here's how to set it up.


Install a New Language in Windows

Click the button for Add a language in Windows 11

For this story, we will assume Windows is set up in English. If you want to add Spanish, for instance, as an additional language, you would open Settings > Time & language > Language & region (Windows 11) or Settings > Time & language > Language (Windows 10) then click the Add a language button.

Click the button for Add a language in Windows 10

Windows will then present you with a list of supported languages. You can browse the list or search for your specific language. Select the entry you wish to use, then click Next. You are then shown a windows with additional language features that can be installed, such as a language pack, text-to-speech, speech recognition, and handwriting.

Select the language you wish to add

Check the features you want installed or confirm that they are checked. Enable Set as my Windows display language if you want Windows to display all the menus, windows, and other text elements in the language you selected. When ready, click Install.

Check the features you want installed

Windows searches for and installs the necessary software components to set up your chosen language. Wait a few minutes for all the components to be installed. You are then prompted to sign out and sign back in for the new language to take effect. Click the Sign out button.

Sign out of Windows

When you sign back in, you should see the the language you just installed displayed on all the menus and windows inside your operating system.

Select the options for the language you added

To further tweak the language settings, return to the Language & region settings page (Windows 11) or the Language settings page (Windows 10). Click the language you added and then select Options or Language options from the menu.

Download features

The next screen indicates which features are already installed. Click the Download button to install any that you wish to add.


Add a New Keyboard

Add a keyboard

To install a dedicated keyboard for your language, click the Add a keyboard button. Depending on the language, choose which specific keyboard you want to add. Now you can change the language of the touch screen keyboard to one of the keyboards you added.

In Windows 10, right-click on the Taskbar and select Show touch keyboard button, then click the Touch Keyboard button on the Taskbar. In Windows 11, right-click on the Taskbar and select Taskbar settings. Under System Tray icons, turn on the switch for Touch keyboard. Then click the Touch Keyboard button on the Taskbar.

Change the language for the touch keyboard

With the touch keyboard on view, click the language button in the lower right corner and change the keyboard to one of the languages you installed.


Change Display Language

Change the displayed language back to English

Now let's say you want to go back to English as the displayed language. Return to Settings > Time & language > Language & region (Windows 11) or Settings > Time & language > Language (Windows 10).

See the windows and menus in English again

Click the dropdown box next to Windows display language and change it back to English. You then need to sign out of Windows, then sign back in to see English as your display language.

Remove a language

If you want to uninstall a language, open the Language & region or Language settings screen and click the language you want to delete. Choose the Remove button next to the language in order to make it disappear.

About Our Expert

Lance Whitney

Lance Whitney

Contributor

My Experience

I've been working for PCMag since early 2016 writing tutorials, how-to pieces, and other articles on consumer technology. Beyond PCMag, I've written news stories and tutorials for a variety of other websites and publications, including CNET, ZDNet, TechRepublic, Macworld, PC World, Time, US News & World Report, and AARP Magazine. I spent seven years writing breaking news for CNET as one of the site’s East Coast reporters. I've also written two books for Wiley & Sons—Windows 8: Five Minutes at a Time and Teach Yourself Visually LinkedIn.

My Areas of Expertise

I've used Windows, Office, and other Microsoft products for years so I'm well versed in that world. I also know the Mac quite well. I'm always working with iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, and Android on my various mobile devices. And these days, I write a lot about AI, so that's become another key area for me.

The Tech I Use

My wife always jokes about all the tech products we have around the house, but I manage to put them to good use for my articles. I like Lenovo computers, so I own a couple of Lenovo desktops and several laptops. I have three MacBooks and a Mac mini. For my mobile life and work, I use an iPhone 16 Pro, iPad Pro, and iPad mini as well as an Apple Watch. But since I write about Android, I own several Android phones and tablets. Like any tech person, I have a cabinet full of cables, wires, and assorted mysterious gadgets. And when it's time to take a break from writing, I have an old Xbox 360 and Nintendo Wii, both of which I use for exercise and fitness games.

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