How to Get Windows Experience Index (WEI) Score in Windows 10
The Windows Experience Index (WEI) uses Windows System Assessment Tool (WinSAT) to measure the capability of your PC's hardware and software configuration and expresses this measurement as a number called a base score. A higher base score generally means that your PC will perform better and faster than a PC with a lower base score, especially when performing more advanced and resource-intensive tasks.
WEI includes a subscore of five key areas of a PC's hardware: desktop graphics, 3D gaming graphics, system memory (RAM) throughput, sequential read throughput of the primary hard disk, and processor (CPU) processing speed and ability. Desktop graphics assessments are focused on the ways a window on the desktop displays and moves. Gaming graphics assessments are focused on the 3D capability of the computer.
The base score is equal to the lowest of the subscores and is not an average of the subscores. The subscores can help show you what area is performing the lowest on your system if you are looking to upgrade your hardware.
WEI reports the score of key system components on a scale of 1.0 to 9.9.
This tutorial will show you how to get the Windows Experience Index (WEI) score in Windows 10 to help measure the capability of your PC without 3rd party programs.
The 3D graphics index score is no longer valid in windows 10. It calculates sets a 9.9 score by default now.
"We no longer run the D3D test. Returned scores and metrics are hardcoded sentinel values."
Contents
- Option One: To Update Windows Experience Index (WEI) Score in Command Prompt
- Option Two: To See Windows Experience Index (WEI) Score in System Diagnostics Report
- Option Three: To See Windows Experience Index (WEI) Score in WinSAT.xml File
- Option Four: To See Windows Experience Index (WEI) Score in PowerShell
1 Open an elevated command prompt.
2 Type thewinsat formal
command into the elevated command prompt, and press Enter. (see screenshot below)
3 When WinSAT has finished assessing your PC, you can view the WEI score using Option Two, Option Four, or Option Five below. (see screenshot below)
1 Press the Win + R keys to open Run, type perfmon into Run, and click/tap on OK to open Performance Monitor.
2 Expand open Reports, System, and System Diagnostics in the left pane of Performance Monitor. (see screenshot below)
3 Under System Diagnostics, click/tap on a report that was created (collected) on the date and time you want to view. (see screenshot below)
If you do not have a system diagnostics report available or want a more current report, then you can generate a new system diagnostics report.
4 In the report, click/tap on Hardware Configuration to expand it open , click/tap on Desktop Rating to expand it open, expand open Query, and expand open Returned Objects. (see screenshot below)
1 Open File Explorer (Win+E).
2 Copy and paste the %windir%\Performance\WinSAT\DataStore path into the address bar of File Explorer, and press Enter. (see screenshot below)
3 Open the Formal.Assessment (Recent).WinSAT.xml file with the most recent date. (see screenshot below)
If you do not have a Formal.Assessment (Recent).WinSAT.xml file or want a more current report, then use Option One above to update the WEI score.
4 Look for the part between the <WinSPR> tags in the .xml file to see what your PC's WEI subscores and base score are. SystemScore will be the base score. (see screenshot below)
1 Open PowerShell.
2 Type the command below into PowerShell, and press Enter. (see screenshot below)
Get-CimInstance Win32_WinSat
The WinSPRLevel is the WEI score. You can use Option One above to update the WEI score.
That's it,
Shawn
Related Tutorials
- How to Generate System Diagnostics Report in Windows 10
- How to Generate System Performance Report in Windows 10