Hack to In-Place “Downgrade” from
Windows 7 Ultimate or Professional to Less Premium Editions
Windows 7 does not allow users to “downgrade” or convert from a more premium and more expensive edition to down-level, more basic and less expensive edition. For example, it’s impossible to downgrade from
Windows 7 Ultimate to
Windows 7 Professional or Enterprise, or from
Windows 7 Professional to
Windows 7 Home Premium or Home Basic.
Windows 7 SKUs or editions have a hierarchy as below:
Starter -> Home Basic -> Home Premium -> Professional -> Ultimate
Upgrade is only possible one-way from the lower edition to higher edition of
Windows 7, and not the other way round. If user attempts to perform an in-place upgrade to downgrade to lesser edition of
Windows 7, an error similar to below will be displayed at compatibility report:
Windows 7 Ultimate cannot be upgraded to
Windows 7 Home Premium. You can choose to install a new copy of
Windows 7 Home Premium instead, but this is different from an upgrade,
Overview, and does not keep your files, settings and programs. You’ll need to reinstall any programs using the original installation discs or files. To save your files before installing Windows, back them up to an external location such as a CD, DVD, or external hard drive. To install a new copy of
Windows 7 Home Premium, click the Back button in the upper left-hand corner, and select “Custom (advanced)”.
The refusal of Windows 7 to downgrade causes several groups of people some headache,
Office Ultimate, especially when user doesn’t want to lose and wipe off existing programs installed. For example, users who installed
Windows 7 Ultimate during beta or release candidate phase of Windows 7,
Office Professional Plus 2010, but now acquire a
Windows 7 Home Premium or
Windows 7 Professional license. The situation can also apply to user who installs
Windows 7 Ultimate or Professional edition, but now wants to go legit by buying or being given a gift of
Windows 7 Home Premium license. End-users also have to go through the hassle of backup all data files when clean install is required.
Microsoft probably forbids downgrade for a reason, such as possibility of corrupting or messing the operating system and complexity involved in such downgrade. For user who must perform in-place downgrade, there is a workaround trick that can force
Windows 7 setup installer to allow “upgrade” or downgrade from uplevel edition of
Windows 7 to downlevel version of
Windows 7, while retaining all installed application software, drivers and migrating all documents,
Office 2010 Standard Key, music, video, shortcuts,
Office 2010 Product Key, bookmarks, favorites,
Microsoft Office Enterprise 2007, and personal data files or settings.
On existing Windows installation, run Registry Editor (RegEdit).
Navigate to the following registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion
In the right pane, change the value data of EditionID and ProductName to reflect a minor version of Windows 7.
For example, to fool OS to think that it’s another edition of
Windows 7, hack the registry key to the following values as below:
Original
Windows 7 Ultimate registry value
Windows 7 Home Premium (allow
Windows 7 Ultimate or Professional to Home Premium downgrade)
EditionID: HomePremium
ProductName: Windows 7 HomePremium
Windows 7 Professional (allow
Windows 7 Ultimate to Professional downgrade)
EditionID: Professional
ProductName:
Windows 7 Professional
Note: The ProductName and EditionID should have the same name with the
Windows 7 operating system name displayed during OS selection on the installation DVD. Some
Windows 7 installation DVD may use “
Windows 7 Home Premium” as OS name. See the hack to enable
Windows 7 OS edition selection during setup by disabling ei.cfg to create universal
Windows 7 installer ISO.
Start Windows 7 installation by inserting Windows 7 DVD disc into disc tray, or mount the
Windows 7 ISO image into a virtual drive.
Select Upgrade as type of installation. Then, continue to install
Windows 7 as per normal.
For user who decided to upgrade from Windows 7 Beta or Windows 7 RC release, the Windows 7 upgrade paths also does not support direct upgrade any prerelease versions of Windows 7. However, an easy hack of modifying cversion.ini can enable direct upgrade to Windows 7 final from Windows 7 RC or Beta.
One last note is that after the “downgrade” of
Windows 7 installation, the operating system must be reactivated.
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