Microsoft has officially moved to modernize a decades-old file system limitation. In the latest Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 27686, the company increased the maximum partition size for the FAT32 file system from 32GB to 2TB.
This change marks the end of a restriction that has persisted since the mid-1990s. While FAT32 remains an aging standard, it is still widely used for USB drives and interoperability between different operating systems.
Modernizing legacy standards
For nearly three decades, Windows users have dealt with the 32GB limit when formatting drives using the FAT32 system. While users could technically create larger partitions using third-party tools or command-line workarounds, the Windows format utility blocked anything larger than 32GB by default.
Microsoft confirmed the update in its official Windows Insider blog post. The company stated that the new limit applies when formatting drives from the command line using the format command.
"When formatting drives from the command line, we have increased the FAT32 limit from 32GB to 2TB," the company noted in the release documentation. The update ensures that users can finally utilize the full capacity of large-scale external storage devices without needing to switch to exFAT or NTFS, which are not always compatible with older hardware or embedded devices.
Despite the increase, the FAT32 system still retains its other inherent limitations. The file system cannot store individual files larger than 4GB. This means that while users can now format a 2TB drive as FAT32, they still cannot transfer high-definition video files or large game installations that exceed the 4GB per-file cap.
Industry analysts note that this shift is likely aimed at improving compatibility for specialized hardware. Many game consoles, car audio systems, and smart home appliances still rely on FAT32 for data recognition. By allowing native support for 2TB partitions, Microsoft simplifies the process for users managing large volumes of small files across diverse hardware ecosystems.
This update is currently available to testers in the Canary Channel. Microsoft has not yet announced a specific timeline for when this change will reach the general public in a stable Windows 11 update, though features introduced in the Canary builds typically migrate to the broader user base within several months.