Critical Windows 11 Task Manager Bug Draining Your PC Resources: Performance Impact & Complete Fix Guide

Microsoft confirms KB5067036 causes Task Manager to leave lingering processes that consume up to 2GB RAM. Complete performance analysis and 6 fix methods from a Performance Specialist.

By Derek Armstrong

Critical Windows 11 Task Manager Bug Draining Your PC Resources: Performance Impact & Complete Fix Guide

Need a fix right now? Jump to: End Task MethodCommand Line FixUninstall Update

If your Windows 11 PC feels slower since the October 28 update, Task Manager might be draining your resources. Microsoft confirmed a critical bug in KB5067036 where Task Manager doesn’t fully close when you click the X button. Each taskmgr.exe process lingers in the background, consuming 20-30MB of RAM.

Here’s what happens: you click X, the window disappears, but the process keeps running. Users who frequently check Task Manager—gamers monitoring performance, developers, or power users—accumulate multiple instances fast. In extreme cases, 100+ processes consume over 2GB of RAM.

I’ve tested six methods to fix this issue, from quick workarounds to permanent solutions. Let me show you how to detect the problem and resolve it.

🔴 CriticalImage Needed(screenshot)

Task Manager Details tab showing 5-10 lingering taskmgr.exe processes with memory usage highlighted - annotated with red arrows pointing to duplicate processes

📝 Instructions:

Capture Windows 11 Task Manager in Details tab view. Must show multiple taskmgr.exe entries (5-10 instances) with the Memory column visible. Annotate with red arrows or circles pointing to the duplicate processes. Sort by Image Name to group them together for clarity.

📄 Filename:

task-manager-lingering-processes.jpg

📐 Dimensions:

1200x800

♿ Alt Text:

Multiple taskmgr.exe processes visible in Windows 11 Task Manager Details tab

💡 Notes:

This is the primary diagnostic image readers need to compare against their own system.

Are You Affected? Quick Detection

Visual Check: Open Task Manager (Ctrl+Shift+Esc) → Details tab → Count taskmgr.exe entries. Expected: 1 | Bug present: 2+

Command Line: Run tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq taskmgr.exe" to count instances.

Update Check: Settings → Windows Update → Update history → Look for KB5067036 dated October 28, 2025.

Affected versions: Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2 only.

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🟡 HighImage Needed(screenshot)

Windows Update history showing KB5067036 with October 28, 2025 date - red box highlighting the update number

📝 Instructions:

Screenshot of Settings → Windows Update → Update history page. KB5067036 should be visible in the list with October 28, 2025 install date. Add a red box or highlight around the KB5067036 entry to make it immediately recognizable. Windows 11 modern settings interface.

📄 Filename:

kb5067036-update-history.jpg

📐 Dimensions:

1200x800

♿ Alt Text:

Windows 11 Update history showing KB5067036 update installation

💡 Notes:

Helps readers identify if they have the problematic update installed.

Performance Impact: How Bad Is It?

The severity depends on your RAM and how often you use Task Manager. Each process consumes 20-30MB of RAM and ~0-1.5% CPU. The impact accumulates invisibly—you won’t see these processes unless you check the Details tab.

Risk by System Type:

8GB RAM: HIGH RISK With 10-15 lingering instances (~300-450MB), you’ll notice slower app launches and memory pressure warnings. Power users could accumulate 50+ instances weekly, wasting 1.5GB—nearly 20% of total capacity.

16GB RAM: MODERATE RISK Around 50 instances (1-1.5GB) affect performance, especially with memory-intensive apps. Gamers monitoring startup programs and performance could accumulate 20-30 instances in one session.

32GB+ RAM: LOW RISK Even 100 instances (2-3GB) represent less than 10% of total memory. Still wasteful, but you have headroom.

🟡 HighImage Needed(table)

Table or simple chart showing Impact by Instance Count - columns: Instances | RAM Used | Impact by System (8GB/16GB/32GB)

📝 Instructions:

Create a clean, readable table showing: Column 1: Instance count (1-5, 10, 25, 50, 100), Column 2: Approximate RAM used (100-150MB, 250-300MB, etc.), Column 3-5: Impact level for 8GB systems (color-coded green/yellow/red), 16GB systems, and 32GB+ systems. Use modern table styling consistent with site design.

📄 Filename:

performance-impact-table.jpg

📐 Dimensions:

1000x600

♿ Alt Text:

Performance impact table showing memory usage by instance count across different system configurations

💡 Notes:

Visual reference for readers to assess their personal risk level. Can be created as a graphic by design team or implemented as HTML table.

Complete Fix Guide: 6 Methods

Method 1: End Task (Quick Fix)

  1. Open Task Manager (Ctrl+Shift+Esc)
  2. Click Details tab
  3. Select lingering taskmgr.exe instances → Right-click → End task

Tedious with 20+ instances. Temporary fix only.

🔵 MediumImage Needed(screenshot)

Task Manager Details tab with multiple taskmgr.exe selected, right-click menu showing 'End task' option highlighted

📝 Instructions:

Screenshot showing Task Manager Details tab with several taskmgr.exe processes visible. One should be selected (highlighted in blue) with the right-click context menu open, showing 'End task' option highlighted or with mouse cursor hovering. Windows 11 style context menu.

📄 Filename:

end-task-method.jpg

📐 Dimensions:

1200x800

♿ Alt Text:

Task Manager context menu showing End task option for selected taskmgr.exe process

💡 Notes:

Visual guide for users who prefer the manual GUI method.

Method 2: Command Line (Batch Kill)

  1. Press Win+R, type cmd, press Enter
  2. Run: taskkill.exe /im taskmgr.exe /f

Kills all instances instantly. Temporary fix.

🟡 HighImage Needed(screenshot)

Command Prompt window showing taskkill.exe /im taskmgr.exe /f command with success messages

📝 Instructions:

Screenshot of Command Prompt window on Windows 11 showing the command 'taskkill.exe /im taskmgr.exe /f' typed in, followed by multiple 'SUCCESS: The process taskmgr.exe with PID XXXX has been terminated.' messages. Should show 3-5 success messages to indicate it killed multiple instances. Black background with white/gray text typical of CMD.

📄 Filename:

command-line-fix.jpg

📐 Dimensions:

1200x700

♿ Alt Text:

Command Prompt showing successful termination of multiple taskmgr.exe processes

💡 Notes:

Critical for tech-savvy users who prefer command-line solutions.

Method 3: Uninstall KB5067036 (Permanent Fix)

Most reliable solution—removes the bug entirely.

  1. Open SettingsWindows UpdateUpdate history
  2. Click Uninstall updates
  3. Find KB5067036Uninstall
  4. Restart

Trade-off: Lose scrollable Start menu and battery percentage indicators.

For heavy Task Manager users on 8GB systems, the performance gain outweighs lost features.

🔴 CriticalImage Needed(screenshot)

Windows Settings → Installed Updates page with KB5067036 highlighted and Uninstall button visible

📝 Instructions:

Screenshot of Settings → Windows Update → Update history → Uninstall updates page. Should show the list of installed updates with KB5067036 visible and either selected (highlighted) or with cursor hovering over it. The Uninstall button should be visible in the interface. Windows 11 modern settings style with rounded corners and new typography.

📄 Filename:

uninstall-update-settings.jpg

📐 Dimensions:

1200x800

♿ Alt Text:

Windows 11 Settings showing KB5067036 update ready to uninstall

💡 Notes:

Primary permanent fix - this screenshot is essential for guiding users through the uninstall process.

Method 4: Alt+F4 Workaround

Press Alt+F4 to close Task Manager instead of clicking X. Some users report this properly terminates the process. Not officially verified, but worth testing.

Method 5: Pause Windows Updates

  1. SettingsWindows UpdatePause updates for 5 weeks

Microsoft should release a fix around mid-November 2025. Learn more about managing Windows updates safely.

Method 6: Use Process Explorer

Download Process Explorer from Microsoft Sysinternals. Offers deeper system visibility with no lingering process bug. Best for power users and developers.

More Windows 11 Performance Guides

If this bug was slowing you down, these guides will help you optimize further: Speed Up Windows 11 Boot Time by 60%, Clean Startup Programs, and Optimize Windows 11 for Gaming. All guides from Derek Armstrong, Performance Specialist.

View Performance Guides

Why This Happened

Normal Process: Click X → Task Manager cleans up → Process terminates → Memory releases

What Breaks: Click X → Window closes → Process doesn’t terminate → Memory stays allocated

Root Cause: Microsoft hasn’t disclosed details, but KB5067036’s Start menu overhaul likely conflicts with Task Manager’s window lifecycle. The close message processes but termination fails.

When Will Microsoft Fix It?

Microsoft acknowledged the bug on October 31, 2025—three days after release. It’s currently “under investigation.”

My Estimate: Based on Microsoft’s response patterns, I expect a fix around November 12-19, 2025 in the Patch Tuesday cycle. Since workarounds exist, Microsoft will treat this as high priority but not emergency.

Should You Take Action?

Act now if: 8GB RAM or less, use Task Manager 10+ times daily, notice slowdowns, or do performance-critical work. Fix: Uninstall KB5067036 or use command-line cleanup.

Monitor if: 16GB RAM, light Task Manager use, no impact yet. Fix: Try Alt+F4 or periodic cleanup.

Wait if: 32GB+ RAM, rarely use Task Manager, value new features.

My verdict: For most users, uninstalling KB5067036 is the smart move. The performance drain accumulates faster than you think. For more ways to optimize Windows 11 performance, see our visual effects optimization guide.

Final Thoughts

KB5067036’s Task Manager bug affects Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2. The cumulative effect—especially on 8GB and 16GB systems—creates meaningful performance drain.

I’ve provided six fix methods. Microsoft’s fix is expected mid-November, but you don’t have to wait. For more Windows 11 troubleshooting help, check our BSOD fixes guide.

Key Takeaways:

  • Lingering processes drain resources invisibly
  • Uninstalling KB5067036 provides the most reliable fix
  • Alternative methods exist for all comfort levels

Check your Details tab now and count your taskmgr.exe instances. You might be surprised.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Will this bug affect my Windows 10 PC?

No. This bug only affects Windows 11 versions 24H2 and 25H2. Windows 10 and earlier Windows 11 versions (23H2 and older) are not affected by KB5067036.

Can I just ignore this if I have 32GB of RAM?

Technically yes, but it’s still wasteful. Even with ample RAM, having dozens of zombie processes running is poor system hygiene. The bug will eventually be patched, so you can wait, but running cleanup periodically is still a good idea.

Will uninstalling KB5067036 cause other problems?

No major problems. You’ll lose the scrollable Start menu and enhanced battery percentage indicators introduced in this update, but all core Windows functionality remains intact. The update wasn’t a security patch, so there’s no security risk to uninstalling it.

Does using Alt+F4 really fix the issue?

It’s unverified. Some users report that Alt+F4 properly terminates the process, but this hasn’t been officially confirmed by Microsoft. Testing shows mixed results across different systems. Worth trying, but don’t rely on it as your only solution.

When will Microsoft officially fix this bug?

Microsoft acknowledged the bug on October 31, 2025 and marked it as “under investigation.” Based on their typical response patterns for non-critical bugs with workarounds, a fix is expected in the mid-November 2025 Patch Tuesday cycle (likely November 12-19, 2025).

Will this bug damage my hard drive or SSD?

No. The bug causes lingering processes that consume RAM and minimal CPU, but there’s no disk I/O activity that would cause wear. It’s a performance nuisance, not a hardware risk.

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