“I stopped digging through folders”: How OmniSearch changed the way I find files on Windows 11

Windows search has always been a bit of a gamble. Sometimes it finds what you need instantly; other times it feels like shouting into the void. OmniSearch changes that. After using it for a few weeks, I’ve stopped digging through folders, stopped opening Start search out of habit, and stopped wondering whether Windows will actually find the file I need. OmniSearch finally feels like the unified, reliable search bar Windows should have had years ago.

This open-source app is built for speed, using low-level NTFS indexing through the USN Journal and MFT to deliver near-instant search results across your drives. It offers a noticeably more responsive and capable search experience while staying fully local on your system.

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For context, Everything (the other comparable free tool) remains the benchmark for pure filename search performance on Windows 11 (and older versions). OmniSearch is not positioned as a replacement for that level of raw speed, but instead takes a broader, workflow-focused direction.

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You can also use the filters to refine your search by extension, size, and date, and even by type (apps, media, docs, and archives). You can perform similar filtering on Windows Search, but the OmniSearch exposes the settings front and center.

OmniSearch search page

(Image credit: Mauro Huculak)

From the search result, you can perform different actions, including open path, copy path, copy filename, copy full filename, rename, and delete.

You can even show previews without opening the file in a specific application using the "Show previews" option in the top-right, under the "Extension" section.

Compared to the built-in search engine, I was impressed with the nearly instant search experience once the tool had an index of all the files.

official GitHub page for OmniSearch.

download the latest version from the GitHub page, you'll have to launch the setup using the .msi or .exe file, and then continue with the typical next, next, next wizard.

After installation, you can launch the tool from the Start menu, and it'll also appear in the System Tray on the Taskbar.

You can also find a version in the Microsoft Store (listed below) for easier installation.

Note: The app is compiled for x64, but we did test it on an ARM laptop (ASUS Zenbook A16), and it ran just fine with no immediate issues or performance degradation.

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