Microsoft has issued a clear warning to IT administrators regarding the upcoming removal of the Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) from future Windows Server releases. This legacy computer name registration and resolution service has been officially deprecated since the release of Windows Server 2022 in August 2021, marking the end of active development for the feature. Windows Server 2025 is set to be the final Long-Term Servicing Channel (LTSC) release to include WINS support. The company has stated that standard support for WINS will continue through the lifecycle of Windows Server 2025, which concludes in November 2034, after which the WINS server role, management console, automation APIs, and related interfaces will be entirely eliminated from the operating system.
The main driver behind this decision is the superiority of the Domain Name System (DNS). Microsoft emphasized that DNS offers significantly better scalability and is fully compliant with modern internet standards, a crucial requirement for contemporary enterprise networking. Furthermore, DNS provides robust security features, such as DNSSEC, which offer protection against cache poisoning and spoofing attacks that WINS and its underlying NetBIOS protocol are unable to mitigate. The necessity of relying on DNS is further underlined by the fact that modern Microsoft services, including Active Directory, cloud platforms, and current Windows APIs, fundamentally rely on DNS for all name resolution tasks.
For organizations that still depend on WINS for their network operations, Microsoft is strongly advising immediate action. The initial step should involve a thorough audit of all existing services and applications that continue to utilize NetBIOS name resolution. The goal of this review is to identify dependencies and formulate a comprehensive migration strategy to a suitable DNS-based infrastructure. The company stressed that a transition plan should already be underway to avoid critical disruptions once WINS is retired.
The recommended migration path involves transitioning to advanced DNS capabilities such as conditional forwarders, split-brain DNS configurations, or the use of search suffix lists to successfully replicate any necessary WINS functionality. Microsoft explicitly cautioned against using temporary and unsustainable workarounds like static host files. Such manual solutions are not only difficult to manage but also do not scale effectively, making them entirely inappropriate for large-scale enterprise environments that require dynamic and reliable name resolution.
In its final notification, Microsoft underlined the urgency of the matter, noting that now is the crucial time to review dependencies, evaluate migration plans, and make informed decisions regarding the network infrastructure. Organizations relying on WINS for any form of NetBIOS name resolution are strongly encouraged to begin migration planning without delay to ensure a smooth and continuous operation of their services well before the feature is permanently removed from the Windows Server platform after the 2025 LTSC release.
Reference:






