How-To

How to Find Apps by First Letter on Windows 11

The Start menu on Windows 11 has been redesigned, but it has features like Windows 10, including finding apps by the first letter. Here’s how it works.

Microsoft has redesigned the Start menu with the release of Windows 11. However, while it looks different, it operates a lot like its predecessor. One of the features is the ability to find apps by the first letter from the Start menu. This is a cool trick that helps you find apps on the Start menu the easy way.

Find Apps on Windows 11 Start Menu by First Letter

To get started, click on the Start button or hit the Windows key on your keyboard to launch the Start menu. Then click the All apps button at the upper-right corner of the menu.

Note: My Start button is on the lower-left corner of the screen. If you like the look of that, you can make the Windows 11 button appear on the left, too.

All Apps Windows 11

Now an alphabetical list of the apps installed on your PC will come up. Just click any letter from your list of apps – it doesn’t matter which letter you click on. I am just using the letter “A” because it’s easy to get to when the list comes up.

Click letter windows 11 start menu

Once you click on one of the app letter headers, a new complete alphabetical list will come up. Now you can click the first letter of whichever app you are looking for. As an example, here, I want to find the Mail app. So, I’m clicking the “M” from the list.

click letter of any app

There you go! That brings me directly to the list of all of the apps that start with the letter “M.”

M section of Apps on Windows 11 Start

Or, here maybe you are looking for the Movies & TV app, so you’d click “M” for that as well. This works for any app provided you know the first letter. For example, maybe you are looking for Spotify – you’d click the letter “S” from the letters menu.

find Spotify from the Start menu

You get the idea. And this can be a real-time-saver when looking for apps from the Start menu. You can also find apps by the first letter on Windows 10, and it works virtually the same way. The only difference is how the Start menu looks – Windows 10 has live tiles, and Windows 11 is a cleaner UI without them.

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Robin Window

    July 1, 2021 at 8:09 am

    I am at a loss to understand why this sudden release of Windows 11 information is being published when the system hasn’t even been released yet for gods sake. And from what i have read a large number of computer owners won’t even be able to run it, including myself.
    The whole thing sounds like a sales disaster, what on earth is Microsoft thinking of in doing such a thing and alienating so many Windows users.
    Am at a loss for words.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

 

To Top