Microsoft’s June 2026 Patch Tuesday made history, but not in a way that IT administrators wanted to celebrate.
The release fixed 206 vulnerabilities, making it the largest number of vulnerabilities ever disclosed in a single security update since Microsoft begun the Patch Tuesday programme 23 years ago
. For UK SMEs already stretched thin on IT resources, this presents a significant challenge: how do you effectively manage security when monthly patch volumes have reached unprecedented levels?
If you’re an office manager or business owner in Kent or the South East, you might be wondering whether your current patch management approach is still fit for purpose. The answer, for most SMEs, is probably not.
The Scale of the Problem: Understanding Record Patch Volumes
Microsoft addressed 206 vulnerabilities in its June 2026 security update release, including fixes for three publicly disclosed zero-day vulnerabilities and 37 Critical vulnerabilities, along with 166 additional vulnerabilities of varying severity levels
. This isn’t just a one-off spike either.
The last two months were also large releases
, suggesting this may become the new normal.
This is by far the largest monthly release since 2017, with the previous record being 177 set last year
. For context,
the current number of CVEs shipped by Microsoft this year exceeds the total number of CVEs shipped in all of 2018
.
The June release included critical vulnerabilities across multiple products:
- Microsoft Windows received the most patches this month with 120, followed by Extended Security Updates (ESU) with 103, and Microsoft Office with 54
- Elevation of privilege led with 65 patches (32%), remote code execution with 55 patches (27%), and information disclosure with 29 (13%)
- Remote Desktop Client (11 CVEs – 4 Critical) was the largest single-component cluster this cycle
Why Traditional Patch Management No Longer Works
Most UK SMEs have historically followed a straightforward approach: apply all patches during a scheduled maintenance window, typically monthly. With patch volumes exceeding 200 vulnerabilities, this approach creates several problems:
The 200-vulnerability release exceeds the typical monthly average and demands aggressive deployment prioritisation. Organisations cannot afford to patch all 200 vulnerabilities with equal attention as time constraints do not permit this. Critical triage is mandatory
.
Even for businesses with dedicated IT staff, the testing burden alone becomes unsustainable. You need to verify that patches won’t break critical business applications, but testing 200+ updates before deployment is simply not realistic for an SME.
The Risk of Delayed Patching
Unfortunately, delaying patches isn’t a viable alternative.
Timely patching is the most effective way to prevent cybercriminals from exploiting known weaknesses. For every patch Microsoft releases, attackers race to reverse-engineer the update to find the underlying vulnerability and develop an exploit for unpatched systems—a phenomenon often referred to as “Exploit Wednesday”
.
As we’ve discussed in our article on vulnerability exploitation overtaking passwords as the top cyber threat, attackers are increasingly targeting unpatched systems rather than trying to crack passwords.
A Practical Patch Prioritisation Strategy for UK SMEs
The solution isn’t to patch everything immediately or to delay everything—it’s to implement intelligent prioritisation. Here’s a framework that works for businesses of all sizes:
Step 1: Identify Zero-Days and Actively Exploited Vulnerabilities
These must be patched immediately, typically within 24-48 hours.
June 2026’s Patch Tuesday fixed six zero-day vulnerabilities, with five publicly disclosed and one exploited in attacks
. One particularly concerning example:
CVE-2026-41091, a Microsoft Defender Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability, saw multiple parties report exploitation, meaning exploitation is likely significant
.
Step 2: Prioritise Critical Remote Code Execution Flaws
The 33 critical-severity vulnerabilities represent 16.5% of the total release, with 28 Critical RCE Vulnerabilities (84.8% of critical flaws) and 4 Critical EoP Vulnerabilities (12.1% of critical flaws)
. Remote code execution vulnerabilities allow attackers to run malicious code on your systems without any user interaction, making them particularly dangerous.
Step 3: Focus on Your Actual Infrastructure
Don’t waste time patching software you don’t use.
If Remote Desktop Connect (RDP) isn’t enabled on your devices, you can safely deprioritise the 11 RDP CVEs
. Similarly, if you’re not running Hyper-V virtualisation infrastructure, those patches can wait.
Create an asset inventory if you haven’t already—you need to know what software is actually running in your environment. This connects to broader IT strategy, which we covered in our guide on signs your business needs managed IT support.
Step 4: Establish Testing Groups
Deploy patches to a small subset of systems first (typically 10-20% of your fleet), wait 48-72 hours, then roll out to the remainder. This approach catches compatibility issues before they affect your entire organisation.
Automating What You Can (and What You Can’t)
Some patching can and should be automated, but not all. Here’s the distinction:
Safe to automate:
- Workstations and laptops used by general staff
- Security software updates (like Microsoft Defender, which
updates itself
) - Non-critical systems with good backups
Requires manual oversight:
- Servers running critical business applications
- Systems with known compatibility issues
- Specialised equipment with embedded Windows systems
As discussed in our article on Microsoft 365 backup strategies, ensuring you have reliable backups before major patching cycles is essential for rapid recovery if something goes wrong.
The Hidden Issue: Servicing Stack Updates
One critical aspect many SMEs overlook:
Administrators should always apply the latest servicing stack update first, because an outdated stack will silently skip newer security packages and leave systems exposed
.
The servicing stack update is the foundation that allows Windows to install security patches correctly.
The servicing stack update is the foundation that actually lets Windows install these patches without corrupting the registry or breaking driver signatures
.
Preparing for the New Normal
Is this the new normal? Should sysadmins adjust their processes for prioritisation and patch deployment based on this new volume of updates?
The evidence suggests yes. With AI tools increasingly being used to discover vulnerabilities (and potentially to fix them), patch volumes are likely to remain elevated.
Practical Steps for UK SMEs
Here’s what you should implement now:
- Document your critical systems: Create a simple spreadsheet listing which systems are business-critical and which can tolerate brief downtime
- Establish a maintenance window: Schedule a consistent time each month for patching, typically outside business hours
- Subscribe to security bulletins: Sign up for Microsoft’s Security Update Guide emails to receive advance notice
- Test your backups: Verify monthly that you can actually restore from backup—many businesses discover backup failures only during emergencies
- Consider managed services: If patch management is overwhelming your internal resources, outsourcing to specialists may be more cost-effective
How This Connects to Broader Security
Effective patch management is just one component of a comprehensive security strategy. It works alongside other measures we’ve covered previously:
- Understanding the revenue impact of security breaches helps justify investment in proper patch management
- Implementing proper firewalls and security controls provides defence-in-depth even when patches are delayed
- Cyber Essentials certification requires documented patch management processes
Don’t Let Record Patch Volumes Overwhelm Your Business
Microsoft’s record-breaking patch volumes create genuine challenges for UK SMEs, but they’re not insurmountable. The key is moving from an “all or nothing” patching approach to intelligent prioritisation based on your actual risk profile.
If you’re unsure whether your current patch management strategy can handle these increased volumes—or if you’re falling behind on security updates—it’s time to get professional advice. At Meridian Micro Limited, we help Kent and South East businesses implement practical, proportionate patch management strategies that protect your systems without overwhelming your resources.
Need help developing a patch management strategy that works for your business? Call us on 01303 883111 or get in touch to discuss how we can help you stay secure without the stress.
