SEATTLE, Jan 26, 2026, 05:14 PST
- Microsoft is looking into Windows 11 boot issues linked to the January security patches
- Over the weekend, an “out-of-band” patch, KB5078127, was released to address hangs in cloud storage and Outlook
- IT teams must balance rapid security patching against the risk of operational disruption
Microsoft is looking into reports of certain Windows 11 machines failing to boot after the January security updates, with users encountering the “UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME” stop code. The company says these incidents are limited and affected devices might require manual recovery. So far, no similar issues have been reported on virtual machines. (BleepingComputer)
Timing is crucial since many organisations rely on Microsoft’s monthly “Patch Tuesday” updates as a narrow operational window. When a patch renders PCs unbootable, what should be a routine update quickly becomes a desk-by-desk recovery mission—and the costs mount immediately.
IT teams face a tough choice: hold off on updates and risk security vulnerabilities, or roll them out and deal with the inevitable break-fix issues. When managing thousands of devices, even a minor failure rate quickly becomes a headache.
On Jan. 24, Microsoft rolled out an out-of-band update, KB5078127, for Windows 11 versions 24H2 and 25H2. This cumulative patch bundles previous January fixes and adds a new one. The update targets issues where certain apps froze or crashed when opening or saving files in cloud services like OneDrive or Dropbox. Additionally, Microsoft noted that some Outlook configurations with PST files stored on OneDrive could hang and fail to reopen properly. (Microsoft Support)
The boot failures came after a turbulent month for Windows updates, as Microsoft pushed out several off-schedule patches over consecutive weekends. Earlier glitches involved shutdown problems restricted to Enterprise and IoT versions of Windows 11 23H2, then crashes and freezes hit cloud apps on newer Windows 11 builds, according to The Verge. (The Verge)
“UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME” is Windows’ way of saying it can’t access the drive volume required to boot. In real terms, this often traps users on a crash screen before they get anywhere near the desktop.
Out-of-band updates are emergency patches released outside the usual monthly schedule, typically triggered by bugs that cause significant disruption and can’t wait. While they help minimize downtime for users, they also increase workload for admins striving to maintain stable deployments.
This app fix goes beyond Microsoft’s OneDrive. Many companies use third-party cloud storage alongside Microsoft’s tools. Dropbox, a direct competitor in this space, was specifically mentioned by Microsoft when outlining the recent file and cloud-storage issues.
Microsoft hasn’t nailed down what exactly is causing the boot failures. It’s still unclear if the January updates are the main culprit or just a trigger interacting with certain device setups. Should the issue lie in hardware firmware, drivers, or particular configurations, patches could take more time. That might prompt some organizations to delay updates, increasing the risk of falling behind on security fixes.
Microsoft has asked affected users and admins to file reports via Windows’ Feedback Hub. The company promises to update its advice as it uncovers more information.