Windows 8 Tip: Buy the Electronic Upgrade Now, Install It Later

You can save big by buying the Windows 8 Pro Upgrade now, but install it in the future

I recommend Microsoft’s web-based installer as the best way to purchase and install Windows 8 Pro. But with the special promotional pricing for this upgrade coming to a close, readers are wondering whether they can buy now (and save) but install later. The answer is a resounding yes.

In fact, you can buy now and install at any time through October 26, 2015.

This is great news. But it’s especially great news for the time being: As I write this, the January 31, 2013 deadline for the promotional pricing expiration is less than a week away. So you can buy the Windows 8 Pro Upgrade through Windows.com for just $39.99 (in the US) now, but install the upgrade at any time in the future, through October 26, 2015. If you have one or more PCs you think you will be upgrading in the future, don’t wait: The price for this upgrade goes up to $199.99 starting February 1, 2013.

(Here’s a meta-tip: You can buy up to five upgrades per email account.)

Here’s how to do it.

On the PC on which you will later upgrade to Windows 8, visit Windows.com and go through the process of purchasing the electronic upgrade. This will trigger the Windows 8 web installer, which I’ve written about in Windows 8 Feature Focus: Web-Based Setup. Following the steps in that article, you will have to step through an Upgrade Advisor-based compatibility check, and then determine what you want to keep (which doesn’t matter since you won’t be completing this process now). Then, you’ll be prompted to pay for Windows 8 Pro. It will cost $39.99 in the US if you do this before February 1, 2013.

Once the purchase is complete, the web-based installer begins downloading the Windows 8 Setup image. This process will take a while, but if this is the only time you’re doing this, I recommend letting it complete. That’s because when the download does complete, you’re given the option to install now, install by creating media, or install later from your desktop. (Setup places a shortcut on the desktop to facilitate the latter option.)

You might consider creating setup media here, if only to have an offline installer for Windows 8 Pro as a backup. I did so while testing this process, using USB media. (An ISO file, which can be used to create a bootable Setup DVD, is the other choice.) Then, just click Finish. (If you skipped this setup media creation step, you can just quit Setup.)

Microsoft will email you a receipt for the purchase which also includes the Windows 8 Pro product key. But this email is doubly important because it includes a link so you can run the web-based installer again; but this version of the installer lets you enter a product key, unlike the one you access normally from Windows.com.

So in the future, when you’re ready to upgrade to Windows 8 Pro, you can use that links to trigger the installer.

And you have until October 26, 2015 to make it happen.

Discuss this Article 56

MattHewitt
on Jan 29, 2013

Is it possible to just purchase the key using the web installer and then use physical media purchased from a store to do the actual upgrade? Or are the keys issued by the web installer special in some way?

Heavyhanded
on Jan 30, 2013

I need to do this tonight! And I need to setup Media Center too. We don't have a "TV." My family does all our TV watching via WMC.

Mortarm
on Jan 30, 2013

So, what happens 10/26/15?

pthurrott
on Jan 30, 2013

Honestly, probably nothing. But this is the contractual date that MS has set as the expiration for running the web-based installer Upgrade. I bet they extend it. But any time before then, you can run the web-based installer and download the Setup media, which will always work. Or you can order it from MS for $15.

hlzietsman
on Jan 31, 2013

I just downloaded the Windows 8 Upgrade utility on one PC, going through the whole payment procedure. I received an e-mail with the keycode, no problem. Then I went to a second PC and clicked on the download again. This time the upgrade.exe downloaded again, but I was not prompted for any information and I did not receive another keycode. Does this mean that once you have purchesed an upgrade you can apply it to 5 different PCs?

facelessghost
on Feb 5, 2013

SSo I bought the upgrade but now I've got cold feet and still haven't installed it. If I decide to stick with Windows 7, can I sell my activation code to someone else, or is it somehow tied to the computer or email account that I used to make the purchase?

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