As an administrator, you can unenroll a Windows 10 or 11 device that's enrolled in Windows device management.
Before you begin
When you unenroll a device:
- Only some Windows settings that were pushed to the device are reset to their default values. Many device-level settings remain. For example, if BitLocker encryption was turned on, the device stays encrypted after you unenroll a device. If another user enrolls in Windows device management, their settings override the existing settings unless the value is Not configured.
- The device won't receive any new or updated Windows settings that are pushed to devices.
- No corporate or personal data is removed from the device.
- The device remains in the device list in your Admin console, in case you want to use the device for another purpose. To remove the device from the list, you can delete it. For details, go to Approve, block, unblock, or delete a device.
- If you installed Google Credential Provider for Windows (GCPW) on the device, the device will be automatically re-enrolled in Windows device management the next time a user signs in through GCPW, unless you disable automatic enrollment. For details, go to Apply settings for Windows 10 or 11 devices.
Unenroll a device
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Sign in with an administrator account to the Google Admin console.
If you aren’t using an administrator account, you can’t access the Admin console.
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- Click Endpoints.
- Select the computer that you want to unenroll from Windows device management.
- At the top left, click More
Unenroll Device.
- Click Unenroll Device to confirm.
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