When I read about the incorporation of a Cloud Rebuild feature in Windows 11, Experimental Build 26300.8772 on July 6, I had to have it. First, of course, I had to upgrade a machine to that release. Alas, I hit a few snags on the way (see my July 15 post for deets) but eventually I got there. Then I used the “Create a recovery drive” facility to build a brand-new bootable WinRE for that PC (a honkin’ ThinkStation P3 Ultra Gen 2). But when I booted to that media, WinRE did not appear amidst its menus. The only way to see it is to use Settings > System > Recovery > Restart Now, and then to select that option under the Troubleshoot menu when on-disk WinRE boots instead. Why? Because getting to Cloud Rebuild requires registry access. I’ll explain…
Accessed via on-disk WinRE, there it is!
Why Cloud Rebuild Requires Registry Access
Cloud Rebuild is a new WinRE recovery option that downloads a fresh Windows installation directly from Windows Update and reinstalls it onto the machine. It preserves nothing — no apps, no settings, no user data. Think of it as the “nuclear but automatic” option: positioned for situations where Reset This PC fails or the local recovery image is corrupted beyond use. It does, however, require an active internet connection and relies on Windows Update to supply appropriate NIC drivers. In short, the cloud does the heavy lifting so you don’t have to carry a USB installer everywhere.
So where does the registry come into play? When you create a recovery UFD from a machine running build 26300.8772, Windows faithfully copies the host’s WinRE.wim to the drive — byte for byte. The Cloud Rebuild code is therefore physically present on that UFD. So why doesn’t the tile appear?
When you boot from the UFD, WinRE runs as a fully isolated, self-contained instance. It has no path to the host machine’s registry — that OS partition might not even be mounted. The enablement check silently fails, and the Cloud Rebuild tile simply doesn’t appear. No error, no explanation, no tile. Additionally, Cloud Rebuild is riding a Controlled Feature Rollout in this build, which means not every enrolled Insider machine receives it simultaneously. That adds yet another variable into an already narrow set of conditions.
Here’s the Catch!
The following insight matters, when it comes to planning how to make best and proper use of Cloud Rebuild. Its registry dependency means this feature is available in a narrower slice of real-world failure scenarios than one might hope. Walk through this landscape:
- Scenario 1 — OS corrupted, disk intact: Native WinRE auto-triggers after two or three consecutive failed boots. The registry is still readable. Cloud Rebuild appears and does its job. This is the sweet spot the feature was designed for.
- Scenario 2 — Recovery partition (or files) deleted or corrupted: Native WinRE is unavailable, so you reach for the UFD. However, Cloud Rebuild won’t appear on the UFD because the isolated WinRE instance can’t reach the host registry. You’re on your own with whatever tools that generic WinRE environment provides.
- Scenario 3 — SSD or NVMe failed or dead: Nothing works. Not Cloud Rebuild, not native WinRE, not the UFD for anything disk-related. At that point, the conversation is about replacement hardware, not recovery software.
- Scenario 4 — BCD or boot files corrupted: Startup Repair may intervene and restore enough of the environment for native WinRE to launch. Cloud Rebuild visibility in that scenario is uncertain and depends on how much of the OS partition structure survived intact.
Microsoft’s own documentation quietly confirms this scope by requiring that the device have “a healthy Windows Recovery Environment” for Cloud Rebuild to function. The architectural intent is clearly to cover soft OS failures — driver corruption, bad cumulative updates, damaged system files — where the underlying disk is intact and the recovery partition is alive. That’s a real and valuable use case. It does not, however, cover every use case.
Cloud Rebuild’s Place in the Recovery Toolkit
For Cloud Rebuild to be a genuine lifeline, your recovery partition must survive whatever broke Windows in the first place. That’s a reasonable bet against driver corruption, a bad update, or OS file damage. But it’s not a bet you should make against disk failure or deliberate partition cleanup.
Additionally, you should test Cloud Rebuild from within a running Windows session before you need it for real. The path is simple: Shift+Restart → Troubleshoot → Recovery and uninstall → Cloud Rebuild. If the tile appears during a deliberate test, you know the feature is enabled on your specific machine. On Insider builds especially, confirm this for yourself. That’s because Controlled Feature Rollout means the tile may simply not be there yet on your hardware, regardless of build number.
If you want to test Cloud Rebuild without committing to a full reinstall, entering WinRE via Shift+Restart lets you verify tile visibility and back out safely. Do this now, on a good day, so you know exactly what you’re working with when a bad day happens.
Closing Thoughts
Cloud Rebuild is not vaporware, and it’s not a gimmick. Within its intended scope — soft OS failure on a machine with a healthy disk and a live recovery partition — it’s a useful automatic recovery mechanism.
The trouble is, “within scope” is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Knowing where that scope ends is the difference between a recovery plan and a recovery hope. The best time to discover that Cloud Rebuild registry access doesn’t extend to your UFD is during a Friday afternoon test with a cup of coffee in hand — not at 2 a.m. during an real recovery. Test deliberately, kit accordingly, and you’ll be fine.
Here in Windows-World, it not only pays to be prepared. It’s also essential to know what you’re doing, and to understand what the tools in your kit can (and can’t) do. ‘Nuff said.


