Most users resize software windows in Windows 11 with their mouse cursors. However, there are other ways to resize windows by pressing keyboard keys. You might even prefer resizing software windows with your keyboard when you try it.

Here are some ways you can resize software windows with a keyboard in Windows 11.

How to Manually Resize Software With the Arrow Keys

You don’t need any extra software to resize software windows with keyboard arrow keys. All you need to do is activate the move pointer cursor on a restored-down window. These are the steps for manually resizing windows with keyboard arrow keys:

  1. Open a software window.
  2. Click the Restore down button in the top-right corner of the window.
  3. Press the Alt + Space hotkey to bring up a window menu.
    A software window menu
  4. Then press the S key to activate the move pointer.
  5. Now resize the window by pressing the up, down, left, and right arrow key buttons. You can use the arrow keys on a keyboard’s Numpad with Num Lock disabled.
  6. Hit Enter when you’ve finished resizing.

This method resizes the window by a small increment each time you press an arrow key. The first arrow key you press will select a top, right, left, or bottom border to adjust.

For example, pressing the down key first selects the window’s bottom border. Then you can move that border up or down or extend or decrease its width with the arrow keys.

How to Resize Software Using Snap Layout Hotkeys

Snap Layouts is one of Windows 11’s best new features. That feature enables you to resize software windows to preset layout sizes. You can utilize that feature with the mouse by hovering the cursor over a window’s Maximize button and selecting an alternative layout on the panel. Those layout options resize windows to halves, thirds, or quarters of the desktop area.

However, you can also resize windows with Snap Layouts by pressing the keyboard keys. To activate the Snap Layout panel without the mouse, press Win + Z. Then press the arrow keys to navigate the layout options. Press Enter to select a highlighted layout for resizing your window.

Snap Layout options

You can resize windows by snapping them to either side of the desktop with a couple of hotkeys. Press the Windows key + right arrow button to snap a window to the right side of the desktop. Or snap to the left side by pressing the Win + left arrow button. A window snapped with those keyboard shortcuts is resized to half the desktop area.

Two side-by-side windows resized with Snap Layout hotkeys

How to Resize Software Windows With Custom Hotkeys

Wouldn’t it be great if Windows 11 included options with which you could create hotkeys for resizing software windows to specific sizes? Of course, Microsoft’s flagship OS doesn’t have such a feature; but you can install software that does.

Sizer is a handy freeware program with which you can set up hotkeys that resize software windows to specific dimensions. This is how to resize software windows by creating keyboard shortcuts with Sizer:

  1. Open Sizer’s Softpedia download page.
  2. Click Download Now > Softpedia Mirror (US) options.
  3. Sizer’s setup file will be in the folder your browser is configured to download to. Press your keyboard’s Win + E keys to view File Explorer, and go to the folder that includes the Sizer setup wizard.
  4. Double-click the sizer4_dev556.msi file.
  5. Select Next twice to reach the Install button.
  6. Click the Sizer 4.0 Setup window’s Install option.
  7. Double-click the Sizer desktop shortcut.
  8. Then select one of the sizes for a hotkey to resize a window to on the Menu tab.
    The Menu tab in Sizer
  9. Click the Edit button.
  10. Select one of the Shortcut key checkboxes for the Alt, Ctrl, Win, or Shift keys.
    The Sizer Menu Entry window
  11. Press a letter to combine with your selected key.
  12. Click OK on the Sizer Menu Entry window.
  13. Select Apply on the Sizer Configuration window.
  14. Then click the Hot Keys tab to check the keyboard shortcut has been added. You should see the hotkey listed on that tab.
    The Hot Keys tab

Now open File Explorer using one of the many ways to open File Explorer to try out your new hotkey. Press the keyboard shortcut you set for window size. That hotkey will resize your window to the size you assigned it for.

If you want to create a hotkey for a window size not included on the Menu tab, click the Add Size button; input alternative dimension values in the Width and Height boxes. Enter a title for the keyboard hotkey in the Description box. Then set a hotkey for the window size as instructed for steps 10 to 13 above.

Sizer’s macro feature enables users to set up more complex scripts for resizing windows. You can set one up by clicking the Add Macro button. However, you’ll need to enter Sizer expressions to create a macro. The Sizer Railroad Diagrams page on BrianApps provides further details about the syntax for that program's macro expressions.

The Sizer Macro Entry window

You can also set the hotkeys to move windows to specific positions. To do that, select size you set a hotkey for on the Menu and click Edit. Select an option on the Move to drop-down menu. Click the OK > Apply option to save the changes.

If you want to remove a hotkey, select the window size you set it for on the Menu tab. Press the Delete button to erase. You can also reorder the sizes on the Menu tab by selecting them and pressing the Move Up and Move Down options.

Sizer has a useful extra popup menu you can access with a keyboard shortcut. Press the Ctrl + Win + Z hotkey to view Sizer’s menu. That menu includes various sizes you can select to resize an active window. You can also access the software’s primary window by selecting Configure Sizer on that menu.

The Sizer popup menu

If you're really enjoying using hotkeys, check out how to set up custom hotkeys in Windows 11.

Resize Your Windows Software by Pressing Keyboard Keys

Resizing windows helps you fit multiple apps open on the desktop better. You may find it better to utilize keyboard keys for changing window sizes with the methods above instead of the mouse.

The Snap Layout feature is handy for evenly resizing and arranging multiple windows on the desktop. Creating hotkeys with Sizer will enable you to resize software windows to specific dimensions more quickly.