Microsoft will stop accepting new third-party print drivers in Windows (2023)

4 months ago 25

It's the beginning of the end for third-party printer drivers in Windows, according to a support document the company released earlier this month. Instead of bespoke drivers for individual printers and scanners, Windows will rely on its built-in universal "class driver" that supports the Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) and other standards embraced by the Mopria Alliance.

The phase-out will kick off in earnest at some point in 2025, when Microsoft will stop accepting new third-party printer drivers in Windows Update. Updates to existing printer drivers will still be allowed, but drivers for new printers can no longer be added. In 2026, all printers connected to a Windows PC will default to the built-in class driver even if a customized third-party driver is available. And starting in 2027, only security-related fixes will be allowed for printer drivers in Windows Update.

If you rely on third-party drivers to support an older printer without Mopria or IPP support, don't worry—third-party print drivers will continue to work in Windows for the foreseeable future, and the support document explicitly says that existing drivers can continue to be installed from Windows Update or downloaded and installed manually by users. Microsoft will also continue to sign new printer drivers as part of its Windows Hardware Compatibility Program, though after 2025, these drivers can no longer be added to Windows Update.

I'm not about to mourn the slow death of third-party printer drivers, which can often be the most rickety part of a fresh Windows install. Apart from the drivers being bloated with mostly irrelevant features, manufacturers usually did a poor job of releasing new drivers to go with new Windows releases, leaving users of older printers to hope that some barebones driver released for Windows 7 back in 2009 would continue to work with newer releases.

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