There are plenty of free tools that can clean, optimize, and boost your Windows PC’s maintenance. But the one I keep coming back to is Glary Utilities, a free all-in-one app from Glarysoft that’s been around since the mid-2000s. It bundles over 20 utilities into a lightweight package under 30 MB, covering everything from removing junk files to cleaning the registry.
It doesn’t have a modern UI or a trendy subscription model — it just handles the cleanup tasks that Windows’ own tools leave on the table without the bloat that many alternatives have picked up over the years.
You can scan and fix your entire system in under a minute
When you open Glary Utilities, the sidebar breaks everything into six categories: Clean Up & Repair, Optimize & Improve, Privacy & Security, Files & Folders, System Tools, and the headline feature, 1-Click Maintenance. Each section opens to a grid of dedicated utilities, and the count adds up quickly.
Most of these would be separate installs if you sourced them on your own, and half would probably come bundled with adware. For something this feature-dense, the footprint is minimal. The entire suite weighs less than some browser extensions I’ve come across. By comparison, I stopped using CCleaner because it installs more heavily and often feels like it is pushing you toward a paid upgrade every time you click a button.
The interface won’t win design awards — it has more of a Windows 7-era look than anything modern. But honestly, I prefer that over a sleek redesign that buries features behind nested menus. For a maintenance toolkit, I want everything visible and reachable. Glary Utilities delivers on that front.
One-click maintenance keeps me coming back
A single button handles what would take several Windows tools to do
The 1-Click Maintenance tab is the feature I use most. It gives you a checklist of six scan types — Registry Cleaner, Shortcuts Fixer, Disk Repair, Tracks Eraser, Temporary Files Cleaner, and Startup Manager. Once you hit the big blue Scan for Issues button, the scan runs through all of them in under a minute.
My last scan pulled up 267 registry issues, 86 broken shortcuts, and 1.78 GB of temporary files — the kind of hidden storage hog that quietly accumulates over time. That’s a single pass. Doing the same manually would mean running Disk Cleanup, then opening the Registry Editor, then checking startup apps through Task Manager, each with its own limitations.
The results screen breaks everything down clearly. You can review what it found, expand categories, and deselect anything you’d rather leave alone before hitting Repair Issues. I appreciate that it doesn’t just blast through your system without asking. I run this once a week; it takes less time than waiting for Windows Update and actually cleans up the things Windows leaves behind. If Glary Utilities only had this one feature, I’d still keep it installed.
To be clear, this is not a “magic” app, and you should use its power with a bit of caution. Specifically, the Registry Cleaner is debated among tech experts, as deleting the wrong key can cause system instability. I recommend backing up your registry and looking through the “Issues Found” list before hitting repair.
These are the standout utilities I rely on the most
Windows has a built-in uninstaller, but it leaves behind registry entries and leftover folders. Glary’s Uninstall Manager handles the full removal, including residual files, and even lets you filter by recently installed programs, large programs, or rarely used ones. It’s the kind of thoroughness that Settings > Apps should offer but doesn’t.
The Context Menu Manager is another standout. Every app you install adds entries to your right-click menu, and Windows gives you no clean way to manage them. Glary lists every single context menu entry across files, folders, and the New and Send To menus, with a checkbox to disable or permanently remove each one.
Then there’s the Startup Manager, which goes well beyond what Task Manager shows you. It breaks startup items into five separate tabs covering startup programs, scheduled tasks, plugins, services, and application services. It even shows community ratings to help you decide which startup apps are safe to disable.
The free version gives you more than enough
You don’t need to pay unless you want automation
Most of what I’ve described so far is available at no cost. Every individual utility, including registry repair, disk cleanup, startup manager, context menu manager, and uninstall manager, works without restrictions on the free plan. There’s no trial period or feature countdown, and no nag screens interrupting your scans. The Pro version costs $39.95 per year and covers up to three PCs.
What it adds is mostly convenience, like automatic maintenance on a schedule, a deep-cleaning mode, and the option to erase privacy tracks every time Windows shuts down. You can see these labeled with orange “PRO” badges on the Overview screen.
However, for most people, the free tier is genuinely sufficient. I’ve been using it without Pro and haven’t felt limited. The manual 1-Click Maintenance scan takes under a minute anyway, so paying for automation doesn’t feel necessary unless you’re managing multiple machines.
Consistent updates keep it relevant
It’s still actively developed and maintained
One of the biggest risks with lesser-known software is abandonment, but Glary Utilities doesn’t have that problem. Glarysoft has been shipping updates on a near-monthly cadence for years, and the app currently sits with a database date of January 19, 2026, at the time of writing.
Updates regularly add compatibility fixes for new Windows builds, expand the malware definition database, and refine existing tools. There’s also a portable version if you’d rather run it from a USB drive without installing anything. That’s a thoughtful option for IT troubleshooting or for cleaning up someone else’s PC without leaving traces.


