Hello everyone,
I’m facing an issue with the Windows 10 update KB5075912 and I’m hoping someone here can point me in the right direction.
Whenever I try to install the update, the process starts normally but eventually fails. In some cases, my PC restarts and then reverts the changes, while other times Windows Update simply reports that the installation was unsuccessful.
PC Specifications:
- Windows 10 Home 22H2 (64-bit)
- AMD Ryzen 5 5600X
- 16GB RAM
- 1TB NVMe SSD
I’ve already tried several common fixes, including restarting the computer, checking for enough free storage space, running the Windows Update troubleshooter, and repairing system files. Unfortunately, none of these steps have solved the problem.
I’m curious if anyone else has encountered this issue with KB5075912. Is there a known bug with this update, or could the failure be related to drivers, corrupted update files, or another underlying Windows problem?
If you’ve successfully fixed this error, I’d love to know what worked for you. Any suggestions, troubleshooting tips, or explanations would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you!
That KB5075912 install failure on Windows 10 is usually not about that specific update being “broken” on its own, it’s more often something on the system blocking or interrupting the update process.
In most cases I’ve seen, it comes down to one of these: corrupted Windows Update cache, missing prerequisites, not enough disk space, or system file corruption. Sometimes antivirus software or third-party cleanup tools also interfere with the installation process.
What usually works is resetting Windows Update components and then trying again. Running Windows Update Troubleshooter is a good first step because it automatically fixes some common issues. If that doesn’t help, running SFC /scannow and DISM repair commands can fix underlying system file problems that prevent updates from installing.
Also worth checking: make sure your system drive has enough free space and that no pending restarts or older failed updates are stuck in the queue, because that can block new ones.
If it still keeps failing after all that, a manual install from the Microsoft Update Catalog sometimes works better than Windows Update itself.