It’s also referred to as the Windows Tools Menu, Power User Task Menu, Power User Hotkey, WinX Menu, or the WIN+X Menu.
How to Open the WIN+X Menu
You can bring up the Power User Menu with your keyboard by pressing the WIN (Windows) key and the X key together. With a mouse, you can show the Power User Menu by right-clicking the Start button. On a touch-only interface, activate the menu by a press-and-hold action on the Start button or whatever right-click action is available with your stylus. Prior to the Windows 8.1 update to Windows 8, bringing up the Power User Menu was only possible using the keyboard shortcut mentioned above, as well as by right-clicking in the bottom-leftmost corner of the screen.
What’s on the Power User Menu?
The Power User Menu in Windows 11, Windows 10, and Windows 8 includes shortcuts to the following tools: [2] In Windows 8.1 and Windows 10, the Command Prompt and Command Prompt (Admin) shortcuts can be optionally changed to Windows PowerShell and Windows PowerShell (Admin), respectively. See How to Switch Command Prompt & PowerShell on the WIN+X Menu for instructions. [3] This shortcut is only available in Windows 8.1, Windows 10, and Windows 11.
Power User Menu Hotkeys
Each Power User Menu shortcut has its own quick access key, or hotkey that, when pressed, opens that particular shortcut without needing to click or tap it. The shortcut key is identified next to the corresponding item above. With the Power User Menu already open, just use one of those keys to immediately open that shortcut. For the Shut down or sign out option, you have to first press U to open the submenu, and then I to sign out, S to sleep, U to shut down, or R to restart the computer.
How to Customize the WIN+X Menu
The Power User Menu can be customized by rearranging or removing shortcuts within the various Group folders contained within this directory: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE is the hive in the Windows Registry where you’ll find the registry keys associated with the Power User Menu shortcuts. The exact location is: However, one of the easiest ways to remove, reorder, rename, or add items to Power User Menu, is to use a graphical program that can do it for you. One example is Win+X Menu Editor, which lets you add your own programs to the menu as well as Control Panel shortcuts, Administrative Tools items, and other shutdown options like hibernation and switch user. It’s also just a click away to restore all the defaults and get the regular Power User Menu back. Hashlnk is another Power User Menu editor that you can download to make changes to the menu. However, it’s a command line utility that isn’t nearly as easy or quick to use as Win+X Menu Editor. You can learn how to use Hashlnk from The Windows Club.
Windows 7 Power User Menu?
Only Windows 11, Windows 10, and Windows 8 have access to the Power User Menu, but third-party programs like WinPlusX can put a menu that looks like it, on your Windows 7 computer. This particular program even lets the menu open with the same WIN+X keyboard shortcut. WinPlusX defaults to having several of the same shortcuts as the ones listed above for newer Windows versions, like Device Manager, Command Prompt, Windows Explorer, Run, and Event Viewer, but also Registry Editor and Notepad. Like Win+X Menu Editor and HashLnk, WinPlusX lets you add your own menu options as well.