For computers and devices that support it, Hardware Accelerated GPU Scheduling enables more efficient GPU scheduling between applications, thus improving performance. This feature is available in Windows 11, however, only for computers that have GPU that supports Hardware Accelerated Scheduling. When your device supports it, Windows 11 will offload most of the GPU scheduling to a dedicated GPU-based scheduling processor. This a feature that isn’t new to Windows 11. It was introduced in Windows 10. To get started with enabling Hardware Accelerated GPU Scheduling in Windows 11, follow the steps below:
How to enable Hardware Accelerated GPU Scheduling in Windows 11
If your device supports it, this can improve your system performance. It is disabled by default, but you can enable it and test it out. Windows 11 has a centralized location for the majority of its settings. From system configurations to creating new users and updating Windows, all can be done from the System Settings pane. To get to System Settings, you can use the Windows key + I shortcut or click on Start ==> Settings as shown in the image below: Alternatively, you can use the search box on the taskbar and search for Settings. Then select to open it. Windows Settings pane should look similar to the image below. In Windows Settings, click System, and select Display on the right pane of your screen shown in the image below. On the Display settings pane, under Related settings, click Graphics as highlighted below. Then select Change default graphic settings as highlighted below. Under default graphics settings, toggle the button to the On position to enable Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling. That should do it. Conclusion: This post showed you how to enable Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling in Windows 11. If you find any error above, please use the comment form below to report.