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How to Show/Hide All User Accounts from Login Screen in Windows 10?

By default, the logon screen in Windows 10/8.1 and Windows Server 2016/2012 R2 displays the account of the last user who logged in to the computer (if the user password is not set, this user will be automatically logged on, even if the autologon is not enabled). However, it is possible to display all user accounts on the welcome screen in Windows 10. You can configure different behavior of this function: you can show the last logon username, hide it, or even list all local or logged domain users.

How to Hide User Account from Windows Logon Screen?

Displaying the account name on the Windows login screen is convenient for users, but reduces the computer security. An attacker who gained local access to a computer will have to pick up only a password (for this there are various ways of social engineering, brute force attacks, or a banal sticker with a password on the monitor).

You can hide the last logged user name on a Windows welcome screen through the GPO. Open the domain (gpmc.msc) or local (gpedit.msc) Group Policy editor and go to the section Computer Configuration -> Windows Settings -> Security Settings -> Local Policies -> Security Options. Enable the policy “Interactive logon: Do not display last user name”. By default, this policy is disabled.

Also, you can hide the username on the login screen through the registry. To do this go to the registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System, create a new DWORD parameter named dontdisplaylastusername with the value 1.

Additionally, you can hide the username on a locked computer. To do this, in the same GPO section you need to enable the policy “Interactive logon: Display user information when the session is locked” and select the value “Do not display user information”.

A registry parameter named DontDisplayLockedUserId in the same registry key with a value of 3 corresponds to this policy setting.

Now on the computer login screen and on the Windows lock screen, an empty fields for entering a username and password are displayed.

How to Show All Local User Account on Login Screen in Windows 10?

In Windows 10 / 8.1, you can list all local user accounts on the welcome screen. To log in to the computer, the user just needs to click on the desired account and specify its password.

To display all local users on the Windows login screen, you need to change the value of Enabled parameter to 1 in the following registry key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Authentication\LogonUI\UserSwitch. You can change this parameter through the RegEdit GUI, Reg Add cli command or Set-ItemProperty PowerShell cmdlet:

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Reg Add HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Authentication\LogonUI\UserSwitch /v Enabled /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f

Set-ItemProperty -Path ‘HKLM:\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Authentication\LogonUI\UserSwitch’ -Name Enabled -Value 1

However, the Windows automatically resets the value of the Enabled parameter to 0 at each user logon. In order to always change the registry value to 1, it’s easier to create a new task in the Task Scheduler that will run at user logon.

The Scheduler task must run one of the commands shown above. You can create this task manually using the taskschd.msc graphic console. But it seems to me that it is much easier to create a Scheduler task using PowerShell. In our case, the commands to create a new task may look as follows:

$Trigger= New-ScheduledTaskTrigger -AtLogOn
$User= «NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM»
$Action= New-ScheduledTaskAction -Execute «PowerShell.exe» -Argument «Set-ItemProperty -Path HKLM:\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Authentication\LogonUI\UserSwitch -Name Enabled -Value 1»
Register-ScheduledTask -TaskName «UserSwitch_Enable» -Trigger $Trigger -User $User -Action $Action -RunLevel Highest –Force

Make sure that the task appeared in Windows Task Scheduler (taskschd.msc).

Log off and then log on again. The task must start automatically and change the value of Enabled registry parameter to 1. Check the current value of the parameter. As you can see, it is 1:

get-ItemProperty -Path ‘HKLM:\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Authentication\LogonUI\UserSwitch’ -Name Enabled

After the next reboot, all local user accounts will be displayed on Windows 10/8.1 logon screen instead of the last one.

There is a separate group policy setting that makes it much easier to list local users account on the Welcome screen of the domain-joined computers. Open the GPO editor, go to the section Computer Configuration -> Administrative Templates -> System -> Logon and enable the policy “Enumerate local users on domain-joined computers”.

Showing Logged Domain Users on Windows 10 Login Screen

If several domain users use one computer, on the welcome screen you can display a list of users who have local active/disconnected session (users will only be displayed if they are logged in, for example, when using public computers, kiosks, an RDS server or its Windows 10 analogue).

To do this, check that in the Computer Configuration -> Windows Settings -> Security Settings -> Local Policies -> Security Options the following policies are disabled:

  • Interactive logon: Don’t display last signed-in: Disabled
  • Interactive logon: Don’t display username at sign-in: Disabled

Then disable the policies in the section Computer Configuration -> Administrative Templates -> System -> Logon:

  • Block user from showing account details on sign-in: Disabled
  • Do not enumerate connected users on domain-joined computer: Disabled

After that, the welcome screen will display a list of accounts with active sessions that have logged in but have been disconnected. It is enough for the user to log in once, and after that just select an account from the list and enter the password.

How to Hide Specific User Account from the Sign-in Screen?

The Windows Welcome screen displays users who are members of one of the following local groups: Administrators, Users, Power Users, Guests.

You can hide any user from the list on the Windows 10 sign-in screen by running the command:

reg add «HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\SpecialAccounts\UserList» /t REG_DWORD /f /d 0 /v UserName

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20 comments

Mine displays all of the accounts by default. How come?

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This is absurd. If this is actually the setting- which has taken an hour of googling to find- to show all the local users on the login screen, the fact that it has to be set and then a timed script created to keep it set is… nucking futs. What a hate joke of an OS.

I agree completely. It’s as if none of the developers considered the basics only the settings one would need to perform a hostile takeover of IBM. I’ve been chasing a way for days to login as any other user in Windows 10. There’s no way to switch users and no solution anywhere. Ask Microsoft? Their response is “There’s no way to switch users in Windows 10? Have you tried logging out?” (Almost took a hostage.)

Arf! This is not about local account, but this tuto is about domain account. When you have severals doamain users on the same domain computer, its interresting to show all users account on the start menu.
By default, they have to choose “other user” and type both their ID and password. So with this method, they just have to click on appropriate username and type password.

For information, this doesn’t work. Scheduled task is working on all users, the reg value switch from 0 to 1 at startup for all users but on startup screen, only last user logged appear.

Not working. MS probably killed it in an update.

You have to change the permissions of the userswitch reg key : change the owner to Admin group and enable full control of the key for Admin and disable the write permission for SYSTEM. This is working since Windows 8.

@Roland – not an adminstrator but often end up having to do deskside support. How do I do what you suggested?

Try to run this powershell script as admin :
## Taken from P/Invoke.NET with minor adjustments.
$Definition = @’
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
public class AdjPriv <
[DllImport(“advapi32.dll”, ExactSpelling = true, SetLastError = true)]
internal static extern bool AdjustTokenPrivileges(IntPtr htok, bool disall,
ref TokPriv1Luid newst, int len, IntPtr prev, IntPtr rele);
[DllImport(“advapi32.dll”, ExactSpelling = true, SetLastError = true)]
internal static extern bool OpenProcessToken(IntPtr h, int acc, ref IntPtr phtok);
[DllImport(“advapi32.dll”, SetLastError = true)]
internal static extern bool LookupPrivilegeValue(string host, string name,
ref long pluid);
[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential, Pack = 1)]
internal struct TokPriv1Luid <
public int Count;
public long Luid;
public int Attr;
>
internal const int SE_PRIVILEGE_ENABLED = 0x00000002;
internal const int TOKEN_QUERY = 0x00000008;
internal const int TOKEN_ADJUST_PRIVILEGES = 0x00000020;
public static bool EnablePrivilege(long processHandle, string privilege) <
bool retVal;
TokPriv1Luid tp;
IntPtr hproc = new IntPtr(processHandle);
IntPtr htok = IntPtr.Zero;
retVal = OpenProcessToken(hproc, TOKEN_ADJUST_PRIVILEGES | TOKEN_QUERY,
ref htok);
tp.Count = 1;
tp.Luid = 0;
tp.Attr = SE_PRIVILEGE_ENABLED;
retVal = LookupPrivilegeValue(null, privilege, ref tp.Luid);
retVal = AdjustTokenPrivileges(htok, false, ref tp, 0, IntPtr.Zero,
IntPtr.Zero);
return retVal;
>
>
‘@
# Take ownership privilege
$ProcessHandle = (Get-Process -id $pid).Handle
$type = Add-Type $definition -PassThru
for ($i=1; $i -le 10;$i++) <
$status=$type[0]::EnablePrivilege($processHandle, “SeTakeOwnershipPrivilege”)
if ($status)
if ($i -eq 10)
start-sleep 1|out-null
>
#
$keypath=”SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Authentication\LogonUI\UserSwitch”
#
# Get localized admin group name
$admin=(get-wmiobject win32_group| Where-Object <$_.sid -eq “s-1-5-32-544”>).name
# Change Owner to the local Administrators group
$regKey = [Microsoft.Win32.Registry]::LocalMachine.OpenSubKey(“$keypath”, “ReadWriteSubTree”, “TakeOwnership”)
$regACL = $regKey.GetAccessControl()
$regACL.SetOwner([System.Security.Principal.NTAccount]”$admin”)
$regKey.SetAccessControl($regACL)
# Change Permissions for the local Administrators group
$regKey = [Microsoft.Win32.Registry]::LocalMachine.OpenSubKey(“$keypath”, “ReadWriteSubTree”, “ChangePermissions”)
$regACL = $regKey.GetAccessControl()
$regRule = New-Object System.Security.AccessControl.RegistryAccessRule (“$admin”,”FullControl”,”ContainerInherit”,”None”,”Allow”)
$regACL.SetAccessRule($regRule)
# Change Permissions for System
$regRule = New-Object System.Security.AccessControl.RegistryAccessRule (“SYSTEM”,”SetValue”,”ContainerInherit”,”None”,”Deny”)
$regACL.SetAccessRule($regRule)
$regKey.SetAccessControl($regACL)
New-ItemProperty -Path “HKLM:\$keyPath” -Name “Enabled” -Value 1 -PropertyType DWORD -Force |out-null

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You need to run this as admin since admin privilege is required to get ownership of the userswitch key owned by the system account.

How to use multiple monitors in Windows 10

After you’ve connected your Windows 10 PC to external displays, you can adjust the settings for each one.

Video: Connecting a monitor

Here’s a video on the basics of connecting to an external monitor.

Before you start

Before changing settings for your external displays, make sure everything is connected properly. Here’s what you can do:

Make sure your cables are properly connected to your PC or dock.

Check for Windows updates. To check for updates, select Start > Settings > Updates & Security > Windows Update > Check for updates.

Tip: If you’re using a wireless display adapter, connect to an HDMI port on newer TVs, then wirelessly connect your PC to it. After connecting your wireless display adapter to your TV, go to your Windows 10 PC and select Start > Settings > System > Display, then select Connect to a wireless display.

Rearrange your displays

You’ll see this option when Windows detects more than one display. Each display will be numbered to help you identify them more easily.

Identify a display

To see which number corresponds to a display, select Start > Settings > System > Display > Rearrange your displays, then select Identify. A number appears on the screen of the display it’s assigned to.

Detect a display

If you connected another display and it isn’t showing in Settings, select Start > Settings > System > Display > Rearrange your displays, then select Detect.

Arrange your displays

If you have multiple displays, you can change how they’re arranged. This is helpful if you want your displays to match how they’re set up in your home or office. In Display settings, select and drag the display to where you want. Do this with all the displays you want to move. When you’re happy with the layout, select Apply. Test your new layout by moving your mouse pointer across the different displays to make sure it works like you expect.

Change display options

After you’re connected to your external displays, you can change settings like your resolution, screen layout, and more. To see available options, select Start > Settings > System > Display.

Change orientation

Windows will recommend an orientation for your screen. To change it in Display settings, go to Scale and Layout, then choose your preferred Display orientation. If you change the orientation of a monitor, you’ll also need to physically rotate the screen. For example, you’d rotate your external display to use it in portrait instead of landscape.

Choose a display option

To change what shows on your displays, press Windows logo key + P. Here’s what you can choose.

See things on one display only.

See the same thing on all your displays.

See your desktop across multiple screens. When you have displays extended, you can move items between the two screens.

See everything on the second display only.

Second screen only

Simply Windows on Youtube — These videos are only available in English

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