How to Make Windows 11 Cursor Bigger & More Accessible (2026 Guide)

Windows 11 cursor size and contrast can be changed in three ways: (1) the built-in Settings app at Settings > Accessibility > Mouse pointer and touch > Mouse pointer style, which offers 4 preset styles (white, black, white-on-black, custom) and 4 size options; (2) custom cursor packs in the .cur file format applied through the same Mouse pointer and touch screen or the legacy Mouse Properties dialog; and (3) AI-generated accessibility cursor packs from a text prompt, like those produced by Cursor Hero, which can output 48x48 or 64x64 pixel high-contrast designs in under 60 seconds. Approximately 8% of men and 0.5% of women of Northern European descent have red-green color vision deficiency (Source: NIH National Eye Institute), and Windows 11's default 32x32 pixel arrow uses subtle color cues that low-vision and color-blind users may not be able to track on standard 1080p or 1440p displays. This guide walks through the built-in Settings steps, accessibility-focused cursor packs from cutecursors.com, color-blind-friendly palette design principles, and how AI generation is now the fastest way to produce a custom high-contrast cursor pack tuned to a specific user vision need. For the full custom cursor landscape, see the Custom Cursor Windows 11 pillar guide.

Why Cursor Size & Contrast Matter

The default Windows 11 cursor is a 32×32 pixel arrow (or 48×48 at high DPI) with a thin black outline and white fill. For most users on a typical 1080p or 1440p display, the cursor is easy to track. For three groups of users, it's not:

Low vision. Users with reduced visual acuity (macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma) often need a cursor 2–4× the default area to track reliably. The WHO estimates at least 2.2 billion people worldwide have a vision impairment (Source: WHO — Blindness and Vision Impairment, 2023).

Color vision deficiency (CVD). Approximately 8% of men and 0.5% of women of Northern European descent have red-green CVD (deuteranopia or protanopia) (Source: NIH National Eye Institute — Color Blindness). Windows 11's default cursor uses a blue accent for link-select and yellow for selection — cues some CVD users cannot distinguish from the surrounding UI. A monochrome or high-luminance-contrast cursor is the standard accessibility fix.

Motion sensitivity. Some users experience motion sickness from animated .ani busy cursors. A static .cur pack, plus Windows 11's "Show animations in Windows" toggle (Settings > Accessibility > Visual effects), eliminates the issue.

A custom cursor pack with high contrast and an oversized design (48×48 or 64×64 pixels) materially improves usability for all three groups.

Built-in Windows 11 Settings: Enlarge the Cursor & Change Its Color

Windows 11 ships with a four-size, four-color cursor system in the Settings app. This is the fastest fix and requires no downloads.

  1. Press Win + I to open Settings.
  2. Go to AccessibilityMouse pointer and touch.
  3. Under Mouse pointer style, pick one of 4 preset styles: White (default), Black, White on black (inverted), or Custom (any Windows accent color).
  4. Under Size, drag the slider through 4 positions: small (32×32, default), medium (40×40), large (48×48), extra-large (56×56).
  5. Click outside the panel to apply — change is immediate, no restart.

Windows 11 Mouse pointer style panel showing 4 style presets and 4 size positions. Reference: support.microsoft.com.

The 4 size positions and 4 style presets are confirmed on the official Microsoft support page (Source: Microsoft Support — Change mouse settings, 2026). If you need a cursor larger than the maximum 56×56 built-in size, or a specific high-contrast color the preset palette doesn't offer, you'll need a custom cursor pack.

Accessibility-Focused Cursor Packs

The built-in Windows 11 cursor customization is good for the basics, but it has two limitations. Maximum size is 56×56 pixels (low-vision users often want 64×64 or larger), and the preset colors are limited (users who need bright yellow on black or pure white on pure black are stuck).

Custom cursor packs solve both. Styles to look for:

For a broader list, see the C4-DISCOVERY listicle — entry #8 is the "Dark Mode High-Contrast Pack," and slots #2 (Cursor Hero) and #4 (Minimal B&W) are both accessibility-friendly defaults.

AI-Generated High-Contrast Cursors

The newest and most flexible option: an AI cursor generator can produce a custom accessibility pack tailored to a specific user need in under a minute. Cursor Hero is the only tool in 2026 built specifically for this.

Useful accessibility prompts to try:

Cursor Hero offers a free tier with 3 generations, a Starter plan at $5/month (30 credits/month + a 200-credit signup bonus), Pro at $29/month (1,000 credits/month, most popular), and a Credits Pack at $99/month with commercial license. The Pro tier supports 64×64 high-contrast generation. The full AI technique is at C6-AI-ANGLE. For broader context, see the Custom Cursor Windows 11 pillar guide.

Color-Blind-Friendly Cursor Design

Color vision deficiency comes in three main forms, and each benefits from a different palette. The general rule: maximize luminance contrast (light vs dark) and avoid hue pairs that CVD users cannot distinguish.

CVD typePopulation (men)AvoidUse instead
Deuteranopia (red-green)~6 percentRed/green pairs, red text on greenYellow on black, white on black, blue on white
Protanopia (red-green)~2 percentRed/green pairs, dark red on blackBlue on white, yellow on black
Tritanopia (blue-yellow)<1 percentBlue/yellow pairs, dark blue on blackBlack on white, red on white, high-luminance contrast

The safest universal palette: pure black on pure white, or pure white on pure black, with a thick (2–3 pixel) outline. Avoid relying on hue alone — if your link cursor and your normal cursor differ only by color, a CVD user cannot tell them apart. Differ by shape (arrow vs hand) and by luminance instead.

Cursor Hero can generate any of these palettes from a prompt. High contrast + no color cues + large size is the most-requested accessibility pack style in 2026.

FAQ

Q: How do I make my cursor bigger in Windows 11? A: Open Settings (Win+I) > Accessibility > Mouse pointer and touch > Mouse pointer style, then drag the Size slider. 4 positions: small (32×32), medium (40×40), large (48×48), extra-large (56×56). For larger than 56×56, you need a custom pack — see C4-DISCOVERY or use Cursor Hero.

Q: What is the best high-contrast cursor color? A: Pure black on pure white, or pure white on pure black, with a 2–3 pixel thick outline. This maximizes luminance contrast and works for red-green CVD users (8% of men of Northern European descent, per NIH NEI) and low-vision users.

Q: Are there cursors designed for visually impaired users? A: Yes. Search cutecursors.com for "high contrast" or "large cursor" — multiple free 10-state packs. Cursor Hero's Pro tier can also generate a 64×64 or 80×80 accessibility pack from a prompt. Full walkthrough in the Custom Cursor Windows 11 pillar guide.

Q: Can AI help with cursor accessibility? A: Yes. Cursor Hero takes a text prompt like "high-contrast white-on-black cursor, 64x64 pixels, no color cues" and generates a coherent 10-state accessibility pack in under 60 seconds. Free tier: 3 generations; Pro at $29/month gives 1,000 credits/month.

Q: What size cursor is best for low vision? A: Windows 11's built-in max is 56×56 pixels. For significant low vision, 64×64 to 80×80 is standard; 96×96 is used for severe low vision. Larger cursors are easier to track but can occlude text — 64×64 is a good balance.

Q: Does Windows 11 have a built-in cursor magnifier? A: Not directly. Windows 11 has the Magnifier tool (Win+Plus) which enlarges the cursor along with everything else. For a larger cursor without enlarging the rest of the UI, use the Mouse pointer style Size slider or a custom cursor pack.

Generate an Accessible Cursor Pack

If the built-in Windows 11 settings don't go far enough, Cursor Hero is the fastest path. Type what you need ("high-contrast yellow-on-black, 64x64, no animation, CVD-friendly"), get a full 10-state Windows 11 cursor pack in under 60 seconds. Free for the first 3 generations.

Try Cursor Hero free →

For the broader context, see the Custom Cursor Windows 11 pillar guide.

Sources & Citations

  1. Microsoft Support — Change mouse settings — Official 4-style, 4-size cursor customization panel in Windows 11 (accessed 2026-06-27).
  2. NIH National Eye Institute — Color Blindness — 8% of men, 0.5% of women of Northern European descent have red-green CVD; deuteranopia and protanopia prevalence (accessed 2026-06-27).
  3. WHO — Blindness and Vision Impairment — At least 2.2 billion people globally have a vision impairment (accessed 2026-06-27).
  4. Microsoft Learn — About Cursors — Windows cursor architecture, .cur file format, 10 default states, 48×48 pixel support on Windows 11 (accessed 2026-06-27).
  5. cutecursors.com — Real SERP-verified direct competitor; high-contrast cursor packs available in the free library (accessed 2026-06-27).
  6. Cursor Hero product spec, 2026 — Performance claim (60-second generation), supported sizes (up to 64×64 on Pro tier), tier pricing.

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Editorial Notes

Publishing Checklist (For Cursor Hero Team)

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