Microsoft has acknowledged several new issues affecting Windows 11 systems following the release of cumulative update KB5095051, with enterprise customers reporting application compatibility problems, deployment failures, and user interface glitches.
The company confirmed that one of the most significant issues impacts applications that rely on Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) automation to interact with Microsoft Office programs.
OLE Automation Bug Disrupts Business Applications
According to Microsoft’s Windows release health dashboard, some third-party applications can no longer successfully launch Microsoft Office applications such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or Access after installing KB5095051.
The issue affects software that uses OLE automation to open documents or trigger Office applications from within another program. In affected environments, Office applications may fail to launch, become unresponsive, or crash without displaying an error message.
The problem has disrupted a variety of enterprise workflows that depend on automated document generation and integration with Microsoft Office.
Accounting, Healthcare, and Research Software Impacted
Specialized business applications appear to be among the hardest hit by the update.
Affected software reportedly includes accounting platforms such as CCH ProSystem fx Engagement and Workpaper Manager, as well as research and citation management tools like Zotero.
Healthcare providers have also reported issues with medical practice management software, including Dentrix and Softdent, where automated document and patient record generation workflows are no longer functioning as expected.
The disruption has forced many organizations to revert to manual processes while awaiting a fix.
Security Hardening Creates Additional Changes
Microsoft noted that some other behavior changes introduced in the June update are intentional.
The company has implemented new restrictions involving desktop.ini files as part of a security hardening effort designed to mitigate Mark of the Web-related attack vectors originating from remote sources.
As a result, organizations may notice custom folder icons no longer displaying correctly on network shares. Microsoft said this behavior is expected and unrelated to the OLE automation issue.
Additional Problems Affecting Deployments and Recycle Bin
The OLE issue is not the only regression identified in KB5095051.
Microsoft is also investigating a deployment media problem that can generate a 0xc0430001 error when organizations update managed Windows installation images.
In addition, a bug introduced on June 19 affects the Recycle Bin interface. Instead of displaying normal file names, some prompts may show internal system strings, creating confusion for users attempting to manage deleted files.
Temporary Workarounds Available
While Microsoft develops permanent fixes, administrators are being advised to use temporary workarounds.
For Office automation failures, users can manually open documents directly within Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or other Office applications rather than launching them through integrated third-party software.
Organizations experiencing deployment issues can manually copy the boot.stl file into the EFI folder of installation media to bypass the imaging error.
Microsoft also recommends that affected enterprises contact Microsoft Support for Business, where dedicated mitigation packages may be available for specific environments.
Investigation Ongoing
Microsoft has classified the OLE automation failure as a Known Issue and says engineers are actively investigating the root cause.
The company has not yet provided a timeline for a permanent resolution, but further updates are expected through the Windows release health dashboard as testing and remediation efforts continue.
The latest issues add to a growing list of challenges associated with the June 2026 Windows update cycle, particularly for enterprise customers relying on complex software integrations and large-scale deployment environments.
