Windows 11 came with a set of medium-level minimum hardware requirements, such as at least a 1GHz two-core CPU from AMD, Intel or Qualcomm, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of available storage and more. Many existing business and consumer PCs didn’t make the cut for Windows 11. SEE: Best Windows laptop 2022: Top notebooks compared But now, via WindowsLatest, comes Microsoft’s fine print in a new support page for running Android apps on Windows 11, which covers RAM, CPU models, and storage type. Warning: it’s not pleasant reading for those on budget hardware. You’ll need not just Windows 11’s minimum 4GB RAM, but actually 8GB to run Android apps on Windows 11. And that’s just the minimum. Microsoft’s ‘recommended’ memory complement is 16GB, meaning even the Surface Laptop 4’s entry-level 8GB of RAM configuration just scrapes through. In other words, you may need to upgrade your RAM or choose a new PC that exceeds the entry-level configuration. In this case of the Surface Laptop 4, which starts at $980 for the Intel Core i5 version with 8GB RAM, you’d need to pay $1,499 for the 16GB configuration that Microsoft recommends for running Android apps. Don’t even think about using Android apps if you’ve bought one of the Windows 11SE Chromebook competitors, such as Microsoft’s $250 Surface Laptop SE. It’s got an Intel Celeron N4020 or N4120 CPU, but Microsoft lists the minimum Intel CPU for Android apps as an 8th-generation Intel Core i3 or above. The same goes for Dell Latitude 3120 and 3120 2-in-1 for Education, which has a Celeron processor, and other recently announced Windows 11 SE laptops. Other CPUs that meet the minimum requirement for Android on Windows 11 are AMD’s Ryzen 3000 (minimum) or above, and Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8c (minimum) or above. Also, don’t look to run Android apps on Windows 11 if you have a PC with a cheaper hard disk drive (HDD); you’ll need a solid-state drive (SSD), according to Microsoft. Microsoft notes that users will need to enable virtualization on Windows 11 to run Android apps.