Group Policy is a feature of Microsoft Windows Active Directory which allows an administrator to make changes on features on Windows computers which are on the network. If the changes you are trying to push is not registered on the client machine, then there could be a problem with the registry.pol file on the client or the Group Policy folder could be missing.
Repair a corrupt Group Policy in Windows 11/10
We will start with the basic suggestion and then move further ahead. You will need to run it on the computer with admininstrative privileges.
1] Perform System Restore
Perform a System Restore and see if that helps you.
2] Run DISM Tool
When you run DISM (Deployment Imaging and Servicing Management) tool, it will repair Windows System Image and Windows Component Store in Windows 10. This will make sure to restore the folders and files if they are missing or corrupt. All of the system inconsistencies and corruptions should be fixed. If this does not help, maybe you need to run DISM with a good source which may be on an external drive, using the following commands: Replace C:\RepairSource\Windows with the location of your repair source To repair an offline image using a mounted image as a repair source, use: See if this has resolved the issue.
3] Delete & Recreate missing registry.pol file
All Group Policy settings are stored in registry.pol file. If this file is missing, any changes pushed to the client will not reflect at all. The good news is that you can recreate it. Just to make sure delete the file, even if it exists. Navigate to C:\Windows\System32\GroupPolicy\Machine. Check if it has the registry.pol file. Delete it permanently using Shift + Delete. To recreate it, open PowerShell with admin privileges. (Win+X+A) Execute the following command to refresh Group Policy settings: This will refreseg Group Policy and recreate the Group Policy File.
4] Reset Group Policy to default
There are a couple of ways to reset Group Policy to default. This will make sure that if there is any trouble because of current settings, it will be resolved. You can use gpupdate or secedit to do it.
5] Recreate secedit.sdb file
Navigate to C:\WINDOWS\security\Database folder. Locate secedit.sdb file. Then either rename it or move it to another folder. Reboot your computer, and it will automatically recreate the file again. All these tips should help you repair a potentially corrupt Group Policy on Windows computer. This post will show you how to Reset Windows if you ever feel the need to – and this one How to repair corrupted or damaged Registry.