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How to Send Ctrl Alt Del Remote Desktop? [RDP CTRL ALT DEL]

Short version? In most RDP sessions, Ctrl+Alt+End sends Ctrl+Alt+Delete to the remote computer. That's the shortcut you actually want. Press it, and the Windows Security screen pops up on the remote machine — lock, sign out, change password, or open Task Manager.

Why not just hit Ctrl+Alt+Delete directly? Because that combo gets intercepted by your local PC. Windows treats it as a secure attention sequence, so it never reaches the remote session. Ctrl+Alt+End is the workaround Microsoft built in.

If you only need Task Manager, skip the security screen entirely and press Ctrl+Shift+Esc. And if you want Windows to forward more key combinations to the remote machine, you can configure that under Apply Windows key combinations in mstsc (more on that below).

Quick Answer card showing Ctrl+Alt+End, Ctrl+Shift+Esc, and mstsc key handling note

Last tested in Microsoft Remote Desktop on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022. Behavior matches Microsoft's official Remote Desktop documentation.

Why Use CTRL+ALT+DELETE Keyboard Shortcut?

Along with CTRL+C and CTRL+V for copy and paste, CTRL+ALT+DELETE is one of the popular keyboard shortcuts a new Windows user learns. The main use for it is to open the Task Manager, from which you can terminate and restart tasks & services that are not responding, as well as see the resource usage of your machine and edit what applications are run on startup.

However, there are other important uses for this shortcut. The menu it opens also contains options for you to lock the computer (i.e. if you have a password set), switch the user account and sign out of the current user. At the bottom right, you could also change the network you are connected to, access the Accessibility options, put your computer to sleep, shut it down, or restart it. With all these features available at the click of a few keys, it can be seen that this is one of the most powerful keyboard shortcuts. To learn more about what this key combination unlocks, see our guide on what CTRL+ALT+DELETE does.

How to Send Ctrl+Alt+Delete in Microsoft Remote Desktop on Windows

If you're using the built-in Remote Desktop Connection (mstsc) on Windows 10, Windows 11, or connecting to a Windows Server, here are your options. Most people only need the first one.

Method 1: Press Ctrl+Alt+End

Make sure the RDP window is focused, then press Ctrl+Alt+End. The remote Windows Security screen appears. From there you can lock the session, sign out, switch user, change your password, or launch Task Manager. This is the single most reliable method. Honestly, 90% of readers can stop here.

Method 2: Change "Apply Windows key combinations" in mstsc

Want Windows shortcuts to land on the remote PC by default? Open the Remote Desktop Connection app. If you're new to this, first see how to use RDP connections — then come back. Press Windows key + R, type mstsc into the Run box and press Enter, click Show Options, then go to the Local Resources tab.

Under Keyboard, you will see "Apply Windows key combinations." Click on the drop-down menu. You get three choices:

  • On this computer — shortcuts go to your local machine.
  • On the remote computer — everything routes to the remote session.
  • Only when using the full screen — the default, and usually the smartest pick.

I personally leave it on "Only when using the full screen." It keeps your local shortcuts working in windowed mode but forwards them once you go fullscreen.

Annotated mstsc settings illustration showing Local Resources and Apply Windows key combinations options

Method 3: Use the On-Screen Keyboard

No working keyboard combo? Type into the Windows search bar osk and select On-Screen Keyboard. From there, you can use all the Windows keyboard shortcuts. You can then click Ctrl + Alt and press the physical End key, or use it as a fallback when a laptop keyboard is misbehaving.

Method 4: Open Task Manager with Ctrl+Shift+Esc

If your real goal is just to kill a frozen process, forget the security screen. Press Ctrl+Shift+Esc and Task Manager opens directly on the remote machine. You can also right-click on the taskbar in Windows — one of the options in the newly-opened menu is to open the Task Manager:

If the RDP host is running Windows 10 or later, you can also open the Task Manager by simply typing Task Manager into the Windows search bar.

How to Send Ctrl+Alt+Delete to Remote Desktop from a Mac

This trips people up. The question isn't "how do I Force Quit on macOS" — it's how to send the Windows secure attention sequence from your Mac to the remote Windows session. Different operating systems handle this differently entirely.

Use Microsoft Remote Desktop for Mac keyboard shortcuts

In the Microsoft Remote Desktop app for Mac, the equivalent is usually Fn + Ctrl + Alt + Backspace (Backspace acts as Delete on Mac keyboards). Mac keyboards don't have a dedicated Delete-forward key, so the Fn layer matters here.

Use the app toolbar or connection menu

Shortcuts vary by app version. The safe move: hover at the top of the screen to reveal the connection toolbar, or check the app's menu bar for a command to send Ctrl+Alt+Del. When the keyboard combo refuses to cooperate, the menu is your friend.

How to Send Ctrl+Alt+Delete in Chrome Remote Desktop

Use the session controls or shortcut options

If you're using Chrome Remote Desktop, it runs in the browser, so key handling differs from mstsc. Open the floating side panel (the little arrow at the screen edge) and look for a Send keys option — Ctrl+Alt+Del is listed there. By pressing CTRL+ALT+END instead of CTRL+ALT+DELETE, you'll get the same functionality but with a slight change in which keys you press. Keep in mind that this keyboard shortcut might not work the same way on other remote desktop applications.

What to do if the keyboard shortcut doesn't work

If the browser swallows your keystrokes, the side panel menu is the reliable path. Don't fight the keyboard. Just click the menu command instead.

How to Send Ctrl+Alt+Delete in AnyDesk

The AnyDesk remote desktop program includes a feature that lets you transmit the Ctrl+Alt+Del command to the remote machine. To accomplish this, take these steps:

  1. Open the AnyDesk Toolbar: When you connect to a remote workstation using AnyDesk, a toolbar appears at the top of the screen. Move your mouse cursor to the top-center of the remote desktop window to reveal it.
  2. Click the Three Dots Menu: Typically, the toolbar contains a menu indicated by three dots (...) or something similar. Click on this menu to expand it.
  3. Select "Send Ctrl+Alt+Del": In the expanded menu, there should be an option named "Send Ctrl+Alt+Del" or similar. Click this option.
  4. Ctrl+Alt+Del Sent: AnyDesk will then send the Ctrl+Alt+Del command to the remote machine. This action will trigger the Windows Security screen on the remote machine, allowing you to perform actions such as locking the computer, signing out, or opening the Task Manager.

Note: After you've executed the Ctrl+Alt+Del command, you can log in to the remote system, lock the session, or open the Task Manager. If the toolbar is not visible, try moving your mouse cursor to the top center of the screen to bring it up. Although the interfaces of several AnyDesk versions may differ significantly, the core processes for sending Ctrl+Alt+Del should be the same.

How to Send Ctrl+Alt+Delete to a Virtual Machine

Hyper-V

In the VMConnect window, open the Action menu and choose Ctrl+Alt+Delete. With an enhanced session, Ctrl+Alt+End also works.

VMware

Use the VM menu > Send Ctrl+Alt+Del, or press Ctrl+Alt+Insert inside the guest.

VirtualBox

Go to Input > Keyboard > Insert Ctrl-Alt-Del. The Host key (Right Ctrl by default) handles other captured combos.

For Linux Users Connecting to Windows

Similar to macOS, Linux distributors such as Ubuntu and Debian don't have any specific function assigned to CTRL+ALT+DELETE. You can use tools like Gnome System Monitor or KDE System Guard to monitor your computer's hardware usage and close unresponsive apps if needed. Linux also allows you to use the command line to manage your system's performance and execute various commands such as the "kill" command that shuts down any unresponsive app.

How to Open Task Manager in Remote Desktop Without Ctrl+Alt+Delete

Sometimes the security screen is overkill. Here's how to jump straight to Task Manager:

  • Ctrl+Shift+Esc — opens Task Manager instantly on the remote machine.
  • Run taskmgr — press Win+R inside the session, type taskmgr, hit Enter.
  • Taskbar / Start — right-click the remote taskbar or Start button and pick Task Manager.

The difference: Ctrl+Shift+Esc skips the Windows Security screen and goes directly to Task Manager. Ctrl+Alt+End shows the security screen first.

Why Ctrl+Alt+Delete Works Differently in Remote Sessions

Ctrl+Alt+Delete is a secure attention sequence. Windows reserves it at the kernel level so malware can't fake the login screen. Because of that protection, your local OS always grabs it first — it never crosses into the RDP session. Microsoft mapped it to Ctrl+Alt+End specifically to route the same request to the remote machine instead.

Troubleshooting: Ctrl+Alt+End Not Working in RDP

Infographic with 5 fixes for when Ctrl+Alt+End is not working in Remote Desktop

Make sure the RDP window is active

Click inside the session first. If the window isn't focused, the shortcut goes nowhere.

Try full-screen mode

With "Only when using the full screen" set, key forwarding only kicks in fullscreen. Press Ctrl+Alt+Break to toggle it.

Check keyboard settings in Local Resources

Revisit Method 2. If Apply Windows key combinations is set to "On this computer," your local PC keeps intercepting everything.

Use Fn on laptop keyboards if needed

Compact laptops often hide End behind an Fn layer. Try Ctrl+Alt+Fn+End.

Check keyboard layout and remapping tools

Non-US layouts or apps like PowerToys can remap keys. Disable remapping tools and confirm the layout matches.

Use the toolbar or on-screen keyboard instead

When all else fails, the connection toolbar's send-keys command or the on-screen keyboard always works.

Remote Desktop Shortcut Reference Table

Tool / Platform Shortcut or Menu Result Notes
Microsoft RDP (Windows) Ctrl+Alt+End Windows Security screen Primary method
Microsoft RDP (Windows) Ctrl+Shift+Esc Task Manager directly Skips security screen
Microsoft RDP (Mac) Fn+Ctrl+Alt+Backspace Windows Security screen Or use the toolbar menu
Chrome Remote Desktop Side panel > Send keys Ctrl+Alt+Del to remote Browser may capture keys
AnyDesk Toolbar > Send Ctrl+Alt+Del Ctrl+Alt+Del to remote Labels vary by version
VMware VM menu / Ctrl+Alt+Insert Ctrl+Alt+Del to guest Insert replaces Delete
Hyper-V Action menu Ctrl+Alt+Del to VM Ctrl+Alt+End in enhanced session
VirtualBox Input > Keyboard menu Ctrl+Alt+Del to guest Host key = Right Ctrl

Conclusion

If you belong to IT support, then RDP is one of the frequently used tools, and buying RDP from a good provider matters. However, regardless of your RDP provider, it can be difficult to manage everything so frequently. Having shortcuts handy makes every task easy and time-saving. It is better to set up a few shortcuts for your applications.

In this article, we have mentioned how you can set up keyboard shortcuts for RDP, and you can use the remote Ctrl+Alt+Delete shortcut key to perform your task. Whether you're on Windows, Mac, Chrome Remote Desktop, AnyDesk, or a virtual machine, the core principle is the same your local machine intercepts the secure attention sequence, and you need a platform-specific workaround to send it to the remote session.

Need a Windows environment to put these shortcuts into practice? Check out Windows VPS plans. For those connecting from mobile, here's how to connect to Windows Server on Android via RDP. And if you're exploring Linux alternatives, see our best Linux distros guide.

Category: Remote

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