Microsoft account vs. local account: How to choose and set up your pick in Windows 11


Dell XPS 14 (2026)

Kyle Kucharski/ZDNET

Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.


ZDNET’s key takeaways

  • A Microsoft account has some advantages, but a local account is fine for Windows 11.
  • Microsoft doesn’t make it easy to set up a local account on a new PC.
  • There are workarounds, but they depend on which edition you’re running.

When you set up a Windows 11 PC for the first time, you’re required to create a user account that allows you to act as the administrator for that computer. On a PC you’re setting up for personal use (at home or in a small office), the Windows Setup program really, really wants you to use a Microsoft account.

Boy oh boy, does that piss off some longtime Windows users, who simply want to set up a local account with a local password and be done with it.

Also: If Microsoft really wants to fix Windows 11, it should do these four things ASAP

I understand the anger and frustration. This sure feels like Microsoft trying to force its users to set up online accounts so they can extract more revenue from them through advertising and add-on products like Microsoft 365 and OneDrive. And that’s true!

It’s also true that Microsoft has been methodically removing the workarounds people have been using to set up a new PC with a Windows 11 account, forcing them to jump through hoops to get things set up the way they want. (Maybe that’s about to change. We’ll see.)

There are, in fact, legitimate reasons to prefer a Microsoft account over a local account. More importantly, it’s possible to set up a Microsoft account so that your personal information is just as secure as it would be on a PC where you sign in with a local account.

But if you don’t want anything to do with a Microsoft account, it’s possible to set up a local account without spiking your blood pressure.

Also: Microsoft may finally remove its frustrating Windows 11 setup requirement

If you’re a charter member of Team Local Account, you might not believe that, so let’s walk through it, step by step. (And one quick note: The information in this post assumes you own and manage your own computer. If your PC is managed by a corporate IT department, this post doesn’t apply to you.)

Local account? Microsoft account? What’s the difference?

Signing in to Windows 11 with a user account is all about authentication and protecting the resources in your user profile. That’s your data, apps, hardware devices, encryption keys, and so on. Before your PC will allow you to use those resources, you have to prove that you’re really you.

With a local account, you do that by typing in a username (up to 20 characters long) and a password. Those credentials are stored in the Security Accounts Manager database, which is saved on the system drive. When you sign in, Windows checks that database and, if you typed everything correctly, lets you in. (By the way, do not use letmein as a password.)

Also: I replaced my Microsoft account password with a passkey – and you should, too

A Microsoft account has a username in the form of an email address and, at least initially, a password. Those credentials are managed on Microsoft’s servers. When you sign in for the first time using a Microsoft account, Windows creates a token and saves it locally in a secure location, protected by the Trusted Platform Module, or TPM. The next time you sign in, Windows compares your credentials against that saved token and allows you to start using your computer.

From your perspective as a user, the only difference between the two account types is that one username looks like a word and the other looks like an email address. Although the authentication methods differ slightly under the hood, the net effect is the same.

What are the pros and cons of a local account?

Local accounts date back to the earliest days of Windows NT, circa 1993. The internet as we know it today barely existed. Browser? What’s that? Netscape was still a year away from its public debut, and the idea of an online authentication service was science fiction. Every account was a local account unless your IT department had you sign in to a Windows domain on their local area network.

Also: Microsoft announces sweeping Windows changes – but no apologies

Very little has changed with local accounts in the last three-plus decades. A local account has one job. As long as you don’t mistype your username or password, you can unlock all your local resources.

Ah, but if you forget your password … ? Well, sorry, you’re out of luck. Unless, at some point, you remembered to create a password reset disk (which is actually a USB flash drive containing your account’s encryption key) and can remember where you stashed it. But without that, you’re SOL.

Do you have a Microsoft 365 Personal or Family subscription? Do you play games on Xbox Game Pass? If so, you should use the Microsoft account associated with that subscription to sign into Windows. That option gives you single sign-on capabilities to all the apps and services associated with that subscription, and it’s just smart to link the accounts so that signing in to Windows also signs you in to your Office apps, OneDrive, and the rest.

And there’s more!

  • On PCs designed for Windows 10 or Windows 11, signing in with a Microsoft account automatically enables full-disk encryption for the system drive, even on systems running Home edition. Your recovery key is stored in OneDrive, allowing you to access your data if you find yourself locked out. On Pro, Enterprise, and Education editions, you can enable BitLocker encryption for secondary drives and removable storage devices, such as flash drives.      
  • Signing in with a Microsoft account stores a record of your successful activation, allowing you to easily restore your activation (no product key required) if you have to reinstall Windows after making significant hardware changes.
  • Windows lets you back up and sync settings across PCs that use the same Microsoft account. That includes personalization settings like your desktop background, saved passwords (including Wi-Fi profiles), language and regional settings, and more. (For a full list, see this Microsoft Support page.)

You don’t have a subscription to a Microsoft service? You might still want a Microsoft account, which lets you sync your apps and settings across multiple devices — as long as you sign in with the same account.

But the biggest advantage of a Microsoft account is its ability to help you recover if you forget your password. Because that account lives on multiple devices, with multiple ways to sign in (biometrics, PIN codes, recovery keys, etc.), you can recover your account easily.

That sounds great, but I can already hear the objection.

Isn’t using a Microsoft account a threat to my privacy?

Not really. Your choice of login name doesn’t unlock any data that isn’t already available through Windows or other Microsoft services.

Let’s scroll through the places where Microsoft and others might be able to access your information:

  • Telemetry. This is information about your PC’s configuration, updates, and errors. It’s tied to your machine ID, a unique hash generated from your hardware. There is absolutely no difference in the diagnostic data transmitted from a Windows PC using a local account compared to a Microsoft account.

Also: I’ve been studying Windows telemetry for a decade – here’s the only setting I turn off

  • Web browsing. If you use a non-Microsoft browser (Google Chrome, Brave, Opera, etc.), there’s no connection to the account you use to sign in to Windows. Even if you use Microsoft Edge, you can choose to set up a profile associated with a different account from the one you use for Windows.
  • App usage. Apps you download and install from the web are not associated with your Microsoft account. Here, too, the account doesn’t have to be the same as the one you use for Windows.
  • Non-Microsoft services. Microsoft services can use the same account you use for Windows, but for accounts from Google, Meta, Dropbox, Yahoo, and the like, there’s no link to your Microsoft account. There might be privacy concerns associated with all those services, but they have nothing to do with your Windows account

What’s the best way to use a Microsoft account?

If you have a Microsoft 365 Personal or Family subscription, you should use it for Windows as well. You’re paying for Microsoft’s apps and services, which means you’ve already made an important trust decision, and this is the most convenient way to access those services.

Also: Want Microsoft 365? Just don’t choose Premium – here’s why

If you don’t have a Microsoft 365 subscription but want the benefits of a Microsoft account (encryption, easy recovery, syncing settings across devices), create a new Microsoft account during setup and use it exclusively on your Windows PC. Don’t send or receive email from that account. Don’t use it to download apps. Don’t sign into your Microsoft 365 account with it. The option is on the setup page shown here.

create-new-microsoft-account

When you’re asked to sign in with a Microsoft account, you have the option to create a new account rather than use an existing one.

Screenshot by Ed Bott/ZDNET

In that configuration, it’s just a username in the form of an email address, with a handful of settings backed up to the cloud.

How to set up a local account on Windows 11 Home edition

On Windows Home edition, you’re limited to only two personal options: a local account or a Microsoft account. The exact same choices are available if you’re running a business edition of Windows and choose the “Set up for personal use” option. 

The easiest way to work around that restriction is to create a brand-new Microsoft account as the primary account during setup. Use any address you want — this is a throwaway account, and you’ll delete it later.

Also: 3 ways I safely retire every Windows PC – and why you shouldn’t skip these critical steps

After setup is complete, sign in with your new Microsoft account, then go to Settings > Accounts > Other Users. Click “Add account” and then choose “I don’t have this person’s sign-in information,” as shown here.

local-account-step-0

To unlock the option to create a local account, click this link.

Screenshot by Ed Bott/ZDNET

That leads to yet another dialog box where you click “Add a user without a Microsoft account,” which finally takes you to the page where you can enter a username and password.

create-a-local-account

It takes way too many steps to get to this page.

Screenshot by Ed Bott/ZDNET

(Here’s a pro tip. Don’t enter a password here. If you do, you’ll need to answer three dumb security questions. Leave the password box blank. After you sign in for the first time using the local account, press Ctrl+Alt+Delete and choose the option to create a password, which skips the security questions requirement.)

After creating that new local account, it appears on the Other Users page. Click the entry for that account while you’re still signed in with your throwaway Microsoft account. Click “Change account type” and change it from Standard user to Administrator.

Also: The best web hosting services: Expert tested and reviewed

You can now sign out of your Microsoft account and sign in with your new local account. Personally, I recommend that you keep that Microsoft account available as a backup method of signing in, just in case something ever happens to your main profile. But if you would rather be done with it, you can go to Settings > Accounts > Other Users, choose the Microsoft account, and click Remove.

That takes way more steps than it should. But the results are exactly what you want.

How to set up a local account on Windows 11 Pro edition

If your new PC is running Windows 11 Pro, the Windows Setup program asks you to choose whether you want to set up the PC for personal use, work, or school, as shown here. Choose the second option. 

local-account-step-1

This choice is only available with Windows Pro, Enterprise, and Education editions

Screenshot by Ed Bott/ZDNET

On the next page, ignore the box to enter an email address. Click the small “Sign-in options” link beneath that box, as shown here.

local-account-step-2

Click here to get to the local account options.

Screenshot by Ed Bott/ZDNET

That takes you to yet another page that doesn’t seem to have anything to do with local accounts. Trust me on this.

local-account-step-3

This option finally takes you to the local account option. Don’t worry — you don’t need a Windows domain.

Screenshot by Ed Bott/ZDNET

It isn’t obvious or intuitive, but click the “Domain join instead” button here. You don’t have a Windows domain, but that doesn’t matter, and the setup program isn’t going to check. This option opens a series of dialog boxes where you can enter a username and password for your local account. When you reach the final page, you can sign in with those credentials and get to work.

Also: The best Windows laptops: Expert tested and reviewed

If all of that seems like too much work, you can take your choice of several third-party utilities that enable a local account option during setup. A free and simple option is Rufus, which creates installation media on a USB flash drive; run Setup from that drive and use the switches to customize your installation.





Source link

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get our latest articles delivered straight to your inbox. No spam, we promise.

Recent Reviews


Here’s a number that should stop you mid-scroll: India’s gross NPA ratio hit a historic low of 2.15% as of September 2025 — the lowest level since 2010-11, confirmed by the RBI in its latest Trends and Progress of Banking in India report released December 2025.

Now here’s the number that puts it in context: the absolute gross NPA stock still stood at ₹4.32 lakh crore.

That gap — between a ratio that looks reassuring and an absolute number that demands serious infrastructure — is exactly where India’s debt collection industry lives in 2026. The headline is good. The operational challenge is not over. And the technology being deployed to close that gap is transforming the industry faster than most lenders have internalized.

India Debt Collection Software Market Overview

Source

The Paradox That Defines This Moment

Understanding India’s NPA story in 2026 requires holding two truths at once.

The first truth: asset quality has genuinely improved. Public sector banks saw their gross NPA ratio fall from 9.11% in March 2021 to 2.58% by March 2025. Net NPAs are at 0.5%. The slippage ratio — which measures fresh loans turning bad — declined for the fifth consecutive year to 1.4% at end-March 2025. By almost every ratio-based metric, this is the healthiest India’s banking sector has been in a generation.

The second truth: the composition of what’s left has changed dramatically. The easy-to-resolve large corporate NPAs have largely been worked through the IBC pipeline. By March 2025, more than 30,000 applications representing underlying defaults of ₹13.78 lakh crore had been settled at the pre-admission stage alone. What remains is a harder, more distributed problem — retail loans, MSME advances, microfinance accounts, scattered across geographies, ticket sizes, and legal jurisdictions. India’s loan book crossed ₹2.2 trillion in FY25, with personal loans alone doubling from 73 million to 146 million accounts in three years.

More loans at smaller ticket sizes, more borrowers who are first-time credit users, more accounts that fall into DPD buckets without the ability to recover through traditional legal channels. The ratio looks good. The recovery work is just beginning.

Technology Has Stopped Being Optional

If 2023 was when collections technology became mainstream, 2026 is when it became existential. The proof is in the adoption curves.

Mid-sized banks observed a 34–36% drop in credit disbursement and collection costs due to AI adoption. Institutions implementing AI-driven collections strategies report recovery rate improvements of 10–25% and significant reductions in operational costs. AI adoption in finance functions has climbed to 59% of firms globally — up from just 37% in 2023.

In India specifically, the pattern is clear: platforms that started with digital nudges and payment reminders have graduated into full-stack recovery infrastructure. Credgenics, which recently partnered with Aye Finance, now combines omnichannel communication with AI-powered borrower scoring, a litigation management system, and an ODR capability — covering the collections lifecycle from the first payment reminder to settlement. DPDZero has built intelligent early-stage workflow automation with strong pre-legal capabilities. Both represent real progress on the front end of the collections funnel.

Industry leaders entering 2026 are clear that AI will act as a major catalyst across servicing, collections, underwriting support, and operational efficiency — with customer-facing adoption following with the right regulatory safeguards in place.

But here is where the story gets more nuanced: most of the AI investment in Indian collections has been concentrated in the 0–90 DPD bucket. The pre-legal stage. The moment a borrower crosses into formal legal territory — a SARFAESI notice, a DRT filing, a Section 138 cheque bounce case — the sophistication level drops sharply. Legal recovery in 2026 is still largely manual at most lenders, tracked through spreadsheets, coordinated over WhatsApp, and measured through gut feel rather than data.

This is the infrastructure gap that defines the next wave of collections technology in India.

Where The Legal Stack Is Breaking

Legal recovery was never meant to be the last resort. Under SARFAESI, lenders have the right to take possession of secured assets without court intervention. Under the IBC, creditors have genuine leverage. Debt Recovery Tribunals were specifically designed to fast-track financial disputes.

The frameworks work. The execution doesn’t — not at scale.

Consider what a legal recovery workflow typically looks like at a mid-sized NBFC with 5,000 NPA accounts: notices are drafted in batches, manually checked, dispatched through India Post without systematic delivery tracking. Court hearing dates live in someone’s calendar. Advocate assignments are based on familiarity rather than performance data. If a case gets adjourned three consecutive times with no action, there’s often no automated alert. The account drifts.

Over 320 new debt recovery platforms launched between 2022 and 2024 offering integrated dashboards, cloud-based workflows, and multilingual customer engagement. Yet very few of these have solved the legal layer — jurisdiction-specific notice templates that pull directly from loan management data, court case tracking that flags at-risk hearings, advocate performance analytics that tell you which empanelled lawyer closes DRT cases fastest in a specific geography.

Platforms built specifically for the collections-to-legal junction are filling this gap. Legodesk’s infrastructure, for instance, is purpose-built around exactly this workflow: legal notice automation with India Post integration and tracked delivery, centralized court case management across DRT, NCLT, and civil courts, and advocate network analytics that surface performance data rather than just contact information. The goal is to make the legal recovery process as operationally tight as pre-legal collections has become — auditability built in, data flowing both ways, outcomes measured.

The Regulatory Ratchet Is Only Moving One Way

The regulatory environment in 2026 is not getting simpler. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, now operationalized through sector-specific guidelines from RBI, SEBI, and IRDAI, has fundamentally changed how lenders must architect their data flows, consent management, and vendor relationships. Regulation is emerging as a structural force rather than a cyclical hurdle for Indian fintechs entering 2026.

In collections specifically, this translates to: contact hour restrictions that require systematic enforcement, documentation requirements that demand automated audit trails, and borrower communication protocols that need to be embedded in the platform rather than left to individual agent discretion.

The lenders best positioned for this environment are the ones who treated compliance infrastructure as a capability investment rather than a cost center. Automated legal notice dispatch — where every notice is templated, timestamped, and tracked — is not just operationally efficient. It is legally defensible in a way that manual processes are not. When the RBI or a DRT asks for evidence of process, a documented digital trail answers that question in minutes. A WhatsApp archive does not.

The Emerging Recovery Ecosystem

One of the more interesting structural shifts in India’s collections space over the last 18 months is the move away from “one platform for everything” thinking toward ecosystem thinking.

Different parts of the recovery journey call for genuinely different capabilities. Pre-litigation resolution through platforms like Presolve360 is creating real value for smaller-ticket disputes — ODR and mediation reduce the burden on formal legal channels for accounts where SARFAESI or DRT proceedings would cost more than the debt itself. Early-stage collections automation from platforms like DPDZero works best when it’s connected to legal escalation triggers rather than operating as an isolated system. Legal management infrastructure like Provakil serves the enterprise legal function well, even where it isn’t collections-specific.

The lenders achieving the best recovery outcomes are not choosing between these. They are building recovery stacks — thinking clearly about what capability handles which stage of the journey, where data needs to flow between systems, and what the handoff protocol looks like when a borrower moves from pre-legal to legal territory.

This ecosystem mindset is relatively new in India. It is where the industry is headed in 2026, and the lenders who get there first are building a durable operational advantage.

What The Number Actually Tells You

Back to that opening statistic. A 2.15% NPA ratio is a genuine achievement — the result of eight years of sustained effort across regulatory reform, IBC implementation, recapitalization, and increasingly sophisticated recovery operations.

But ₹4.32 lakh crore in absolute gross NPAs, sitting in a loan book that is growing at double digits annually, with a retail and MSME composition that requires more distributed, technology-intensive recovery operations than anything India’s collections industry has managed before — that is not a problem that a good ratio solves.

It is a problem that infrastructure solves. And in 2026, the infrastructure is finally being built.

Legodesk provides legal recovery infrastructure for banks, NBFCs, and fintechs — connecting collections workflows with legal notice automation, court case management, and advocate network analytics. Contact us

FAQs

What is India’s current NPA ratio in 2026?

India’s gross NPA ratio reached a historic low of 2.15% as of September 2025, according to RBI data confirmed in February 2026. In absolute terms, gross NPAs stood at approximately ₹4.32 lakh crore as of the same period.

How is AI being used in debt collection in India?

AI is being deployed across predictive default scoring, omnichannel borrower communication, automated legal notice dispatch, and court case management. Mid-sized banks have reported a 34–36% reduction in collection costs after AI adoption, with recovery rate improvements of 10–25%.

What laws govern debt recovery in India?

How is AI being used in debt collection in India? A: AI is being deployed across predictive default scoring, omnichannel borrower communication, automated legal notice dispatch, and court case management. Mid-sized banks have rep

What is the size of the debt collection software market in India?

India’s debt collection software market reached approximately $172.8 million in 2024 and is projected to grow to $456 million by 2033 at a CAGR of 10.48%, per IMARC Group.



Source link