Group Policy and the Group Policy editor are some of the most useful features on Windows. These are official tools that are native to Microsoft"s OS and can be utilized by admins and users alike to configure their systems as they want to, provided they are familiar with it and know what they are doing.
Microsoft also publishes important policies from time to time which can be deployed by admins, and savvy users too can find ways and hacks around restrictions with the help of this powerful tool. The most recent such example is that of a new policy to remove Copilot from enterprise-managed PCs.
Recently, the company has made an update to the official GPO files for Registry configurations called Registry.pol. The new change can be especially useful for quickly making fixes in case of erroneous and corrupt Registry policy files. The update rolled out to Windows 11 25H2 and 24H2 with the latest February 2026 Patch Tuesday release.
Alongside that, Microsoft confirmed this past week that it is also releasing another Group Policy feature upgrade on the aforementioned Windows versions. The tech giant is making GPP debugging available to local group policies too, which should again make Group Policy troubleshooting easier for admins.
If you are not familiar with what GPP or Group Policy preferences are, they essentially allow administrators to configure their preferred additional settings that are not available through regular Group policies. However, these are not enforced as they are done via various client-side extensions, which means users can also tweak them.
This is where GPP Debug logging comes in as it allows creating detailed logs such that admins can track user-made changes so that troubleshooting and debugging gets easier. So with this newly announced improvement, admins will be able to troubleshoot directly on client devices as GPP debug logging is no longer limited to domains.
You can find the full details on how to use the feature here on Microsoft"s official Tech Community blog post.