Windows command guide
How to Fix Windows Update Error 0x800f081f with DISM
Error 0x800f081f usually means Windows cannot find the source files needed for servicing repair. A matching install image can give DISM the files it needs when the normal online path fails.
This guide is written around the specific symptom-command match for fix windows update error 0x800f081f, not as a generic dump of terminal lines. That makes the page more useful for real troubleshooting and reduces the chance of running the wrong repair step.
DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess
Best place to run it
Elevated Command Prompt is the right execution context for this page. Because this repair touches protected Windows state, a normal unelevated shell can return misleading access errors or partial results.
Fast repair workflow
- Start from the exact symptom on this page: DISM /RestoreHealth fails with 0x800f081f
- Run the primary repair line exactly as shown: DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess.
- This workflow is tuned for this repair, so avoid mixing it with unrelated repair commands too early.
- Reboot if the servicing stack or protected files were changed, then retry the original Windows action.
- Escalate only after reading the output, usually toward CBS.log, DISM source repair, or Windows Update-specific repair.
Copyable wrapper script
Use this wrapper when you want the page command inside a clearer script block with start and finish prompts.
@echo off
echo Run this CMD sequence in an elevated Command Prompt.
echo Starting targeted repair sequence...
DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess
echo.
echo Review the output before closing this window.
pause
Verification commands after the repair
These follow-up commands help you check whether the repair actually changed the Windows state that matters, instead of assuming success from a single line.
DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth
sfc /verifyonly
What problem this command is trying to solve
This command targets servicing corruption and missing repair source files.
- DISM /RestoreHealth fails with 0x800f081f.
- Windows Update keeps failing.
- Optional features refuse to install.
How the command works
DISM repairs the online image while using a local install image as the source.
When it makes sense to run it
Use it when ordinary DISM repair fails with source-file errors and you have a matching ISO.
Before you run this command
- Open an elevated Command Prompt or PowerShell window before running DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess.
- Confirm that the symptom really matches this guide, especially if you are seeing signs such as: dism /restorehealth fails with 0x800f081f.
- Keep any exact DISM, SFC, CBS, or Windows Update error output because those details matter in the next step.
What result to expect
After running DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess, compare the result against the symptom that brought you here. The most useful checkpoint is whether dism /restorehealth fails with 0x800f081f becomes less frequent, changes form, or produces a clearer error message. A command page is stronger when it helps you verify a real change instead of just assuming the line must have worked.
How to verify that it worked
The best verification step after DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess is to repeat the action that previously triggered the problem. If windows update keeps failing still appears in exactly the same way, the command probably was not the whole answer and you should move to the next targeted check instead of assuming the page is finished.
Why administrator rights matter here
This command changes system integrity and component corruption. Run it in an elevated shell so Windows can apply the repair instead of only returning an access or privilege error.
Before you run it
Replace X: with the mounted ISO letter and verify the correct image index.
When this is probably the wrong fix
This is not the right first fix for a single third-party app bug, a browser-only issue, or obvious hardware failure. Use it when the symptom points to Windows image health, recurring update corruption, or protected system files.
What to do if it does not help
If DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess does not improve dism /restorehealth fails with 0x800f081f, move to the next repair step that matches the same symptom family instead of piling on random commands. The best follow-up depends on whether the failure is mainly about system integrity and component corruption.
Frequently asked questions
Should I use DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess for this exact Windows symptom?
Use it when the behavior on your PC lines up with the repair target on this page: This command targets servicing corruption and missing repair source files.
What should I check right after DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess?
Check whether the original trigger still reproduces the same failure. For this page, a useful checkpoint is whether dism /restorehealth fails with 0x800f081f becomes less frequent, changes form, or points you toward a more specific next step.
When should I not rely on DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:WIM:X:\sources\install.wim:1 /LimitAccess alone?
This is not the right first fix for a single third-party app bug, a browser-only issue, or obvious hardware failure. Use it when the symptom points to Windows image health, recurring update corruption, or protected system files.