Windows 10 includes a number of built-in apps ranging from basic apps like Calculator and Weather to more task-focused apps like Mail and Photos. While these built-in apps are fine for most situations, in a business environment, they may be inappropriate, redundant or unsupported. Very often, these apps are my pose a security risk. That’s why, in this post, you’re going to learn how to remove Windows 10 apps with PowerShell.

The problem is that Microsoft doesn’t make it easy to uninstall some of these apps. There is no uninstall button when uninstalling using normal methods. The built-in apps must be uninstalled through PowerShell.

Disclaimer: Do not uninstall all the Windows 10 apps. Many of them are needed for the Windows 10 “Experience” and others, like the .NET framework, are needed for other programs. Be picky about which applications to uninstall. You can reinstall all the applications, however, and you will see the PowerShell command to just that at the end of this article

Finding Windows 10 Apps with PowerShell

There are actually two different kinds of applications that we will be working with.

AppX packages – Applications installed with the operating system

AppX provisioned packages – Applications installed as part of the user profile first time setup.

The first step is to get an inventory of the apps that are installed. To do that, start PowerShell with elevated privileges and run the command Get-AppxPackage . This will return all of the AppX packages installed on Windows 10.

PS C:\> Get-AppxPackage Name : Microsoft.NET.Native.Framework.1.6 Publisher : CN=Microsoft Corporation, O=Microsoft Corporation, L=Redmond, S=Washington, C=US Architecture : X64 ResourceId : Version : 1.6.24903.0 PackageFullName : Microsoft.NET.Native.Framework.1.6_1.6.24903.0_x64__8wekyb3d8bbwe InstallLocation : C:\Program Files\WindowsApps\Microsoft.NET.Native.Framework.1.6_1.6.24903.0_x64__8wekyb3d8bbwe IsFramework : True PackageFamilyName : Microsoft.NET.Native.Framework.1.6_8wekyb3d8bbwe PublisherId : 8wekyb3d8bbwe IsResourcePackage : False IsBundle : False IsDevelopmentMode : False IsPartiallyStaged : False SignatureKind : Store Status : Ok --snip--

The provisioned packages have a slightly different command and also need the Online parameter. The Online parameter pulls packages from the current online operating system as opposed to an image file located in a local directory. This will present a list of all the details regarding each package.

PS C:\> Get-AppxProvisionedPackage -Online DisplayName : Microsoft.3DBuilder Version : 16.1.1431.0 Architecture : neutral ResourceId : ~ PackageName : Microsoft.3DBuilder_16.1.1431.0_neutral_~_8wekyb3d8bbwe Regions : DisplayName : Microsoft.BingWeather Version : 4.31.11905.0 Architecture : neutral ResourceId : ~ PackageName : Microsoft.BingWeather_4.31.11905.0_neutral_~_8wekyb3d8bbwe Regions : --snip--

Narrowing down the app listings

Both of these commands produce rather verbose listing and all you’re interested in is the Name of the package for the Appx packages and the DisplayName for the provisioned packages as shown below.

Details of Get-AppxPackage listing

Listing for get-appxprovisionedpackage

To make things a little easier, pipe the results through Select-Object and select the Name and the DisplayName properties. This will give you a list like the one below. This list is easier to work with.

Get-AppxPackage | Select-Object Name

Output of get-appxpackage | select object name

Now you can see which Windows 10 apps you’d like to remove. At this point, you need to list all of the names of the packages you’d like to remove. One way to do that is to copy and paste the Windows 10 apps you’re interested in in removing and build a list that way. One trick that I use is to save the results to a text file and then open that file in Visual Studio Code. For example:

Get-AppxPackage | Select-object name | Out-File apps.txt | code apps.txt

In your external editor, begin building up an array of apps to remove.

$ProvisionedAppPackageNames = @()

Now that you have the list, you can start building the PowerShell script.

Removing Windows 10 Apps with PowerShell

You should now have an array defined in your editor that contains the names of all the AppX packages you’d like removed. I’ve come up with an example below.

$ProvisionedAppPackageNames = @( "Microsoft.BingFinance" "Microsoft.BingNews" "Microsoft.BingSports" "Microsoft.BingWeather" "Microsoft.MicrosoftOfficeHub" "Microsoft.Getstarted" "microsoft.windowscommunicationsapps" # Mail,Calendar "Microsoft.Office.OneNote" "Microsoft.People" "Microsoft.SkypeApp" "Microsoft.XboxApp" "Microsoft.ZuneMusic" "Microsoft.ZuneVideo" )

With the array populated with the specific applications to be removed, you can now set up the foreach loop to step through each package to uninstall using the Remove-AppXProvisionedPackage cmdlet and the Remove-AppXPackage cmdlet.

foreach ($ProvisionedAppName in $ProvisionedAppPackageNames) { Get-AppxPackage -Name $ProvisionedAppName -AllUsers | Remove-AppxPackage Get-AppXProvisionedPackage -Online | Where-Object DisplayName -EQ $ProvisionedAppName | Remove-AppxProvisionedPackage -Online }

If for any reason you want to reinstall all applications, you can always use the add-AppXPackage cmdlet to register the Windows 10 app again by specifying it’s application manifest XML file as shown below.

Get-AppxPackage -AllUsers | Foreach { Add-AppxPackage -DisableDevelopmentMode -Register "$($_.InstallLocation)\AppXManifest.xml" }

Summary

Even though Microsoft doesn’t make it easy to uninstall Windows 10 apps, you can see you’ll always have PowerShell to fall back onto!