Windows 11 and 10 have multiple animations and visual effects for better presentability. However, if you find the effects choppy and imperfect, you may disable them to make Windows run smoother.
Disabling Animation Effects
The Settings app is the easiest way to manage the animation effects on your Windows 11 PC. Turning off this feature removes all the icons, elements, action center, and window-related animation. This eliminates delays in launching and opening windows, making your PC snappier overall.
To turn off Animation Effects,open the Settings appand navigate to theAccessibilitysettings. Open theVisual Effectssection and toggleAnimation effectsto off.

An alternative way to disable it is using the Control Panel. Navigate toControl Panel>Ease of Access>Ease of Access Center>Make the computer easier to seesection.
Uncheck theTurn off all unnecessary animations (when possible)checkbox and click onApply.

Disabling Visual Effects using Advanced System Properties
Animation effects are merely one aspect of the visual effects settings in Windows 11 and 10. Disabling animations gives you a snappier experience but doesn’t tackle other elements like thumbnails, Peek, sliding effects, and more.
You must use the Advanced System Settings utility to control all the visual effects. Here’s how to do it:
You’ll notice that all the animation is gone, there’s no sliding effect, and even the fonts look thin and unclear. Since this is a performance-focused setting, you lose all visual effects.
Fine-Tuning Visual Effects
While I’m ready to sacrifice anything for better performance, the “Adjust for best performance” setting is a bit too harsh for my personal taste. I can live without animation effects and other stuff, but making theWindows font blurry and pixelatedmakes the OS difficult to use.
you may also choose to stop a certain animation style or visual effect rather than disabling all of them.
So, use a custom plan and only disable visual effects that don’t mean much or are a hindrance. Here’s how:
Now, you can play around with all the visual effect settings. Here are some of the most performance-crushing ones:
There are a few more settings, but they have little to no impact on improving the visual experience on Windows. I generally turn off animation effects that make any app window launch or minimize faster.
I cannot bear the sliding effect in some OS areas, like the app windows and Taskbar, and disable the animation effect from the Settings app or the Advanced System Properties tool.
However, you’ll be disappointed if you expect a huge performance improvement after stopping visual effects in Windows 11. Modern Windows 11 and 10 PCs can tackle animations without breaking a sweat, and I suggest disabling visual effects only if you find them laggard and unpleasant.
If you want to boost performance, several ways exist toimprove Windows PC performancerather than live without visual effects.