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How to Quickly Show Your Desktop on Windows 10

  • Benj Edwards

    @benjedwards


  • June 15, 2020, 11:23am EDT

Sometimes you need to quickly see your Desktop in Windows 10, but you dont want to tediously minimize every open app window or move them and lose their layout. Luckily, several ways to allow you to quickly see the Desktop, then pick up where you left off. Heres how.

How to Show the Desktop Using the Taskbar Button

Lets say youre casually browsing your favorite website, and you have several windows open like this:

If youd like to see an item on your Desktop quickly without disturbing your window layout, click on the tiny area to the right of the small vertical line on the far-right side of the taskbar.

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Thats rightthis tiny slice of taskbar is actually a Show Desktop button. Once you click it, your application windows will temporarily disappear, and you will see the Desktop.

This taskbar button works like a toggle switch. If you click it again, your Windows will pop right back up where they were before.

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Very handy. If you dont like using this tiny button, its possible to craft your own Show Desktop shortcut that you can place on the Quick Launch toolbar or pin it to the taskbar itself. You can also show the Desktop using a few other methods that well cover next.

RELATED: How to Move the "Show Desktop" Icon to the Quick Launch Bar or the Taskbar in Windows

How to Peek at the Desktop Using the Taskbar

Windows 10 includes a second way of looking at the desktop quickly called Aero Peek. To use it, first find the tiny Show Desktop button on the far-right side of the taskbar. It looks like this:

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Right-click on the Show Desktop button and a tiny menu will pop up.

This menu has two options. The first, Show desktop, is an action. If you click on it, you will see the Desktop just as if you had left-clicked on the button. The second option, named Peek At Desktop, is a toggle setting. If you click it, a checkmark will appear to its left.

After that, if you hover your mouse cursor over the Show Desktop button, you will see a quick peek at the Desktop with approximations of the current application windows showing as translucent outlines.

When you move your mouse away, your application windows will appear again. Once the novelty fades and youd like to turn Aero Peek off, right-click on the Show Desktop button again and uncheck the Peek At The Desktop option.

RELATED: How to Make Aero Peek Display Instantly in Windows

How to Show the Desktop By Right-Clicking the Taskbar

You can also show the Desktop quickly by right-clicking on the taskbar. When a menu pops up, select Show The Desktop.

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As with the methods above, all of your application windows will be temporarily hidden. To bring them back, right-click on the taskbar again. This time, select Show Open Windows, and they will return just as they were before.

How to Show the Desktop Using a Keyboard Shortcut

If youd prefer to use a keyboard shortcut to temporarily hide your application windows and show the Desktop, press Windows+D. Like the Show Desktop button, this shortcut works as a toggle. To bring back your application windows, press Windows+D again.

Further Adventures in Showing the Desktop

If you have a mouse or pointing device with extra buttons, its usually possible to assign the Show Desktop function to a button. For example, you could configure the middle scroll wheel button this way, and when youd like to quickly see your desktop, just click the button. Configurations vary, depending on the mouse utility software [or drivers] you are using. Whichever way you set it up, youll probably feel like you are using Windows 10 more efficiently. Have fun!

RELATED: How to Use an MMO or MOBA Mouse For Productivity

Benj Edwards
Benj Edwards is an Associate Editor for How-To Geek. For over 15 years, he has written about technology and tech history for sites such as The Atlantic, Fast Company, PCMag, PCWorld, Macworld, Ars Technica, and Wired. In 2005, he created Vintage Computing and Gaming, a blog devoted to tech history. He also created The Culture of Tech podcast and regularly contributes to the Retronauts retrogaming podcast. Read Full Bio »

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