“Just install Linux” is popular advice when someone needs to squeeze a little bit more life out of an old PC. It also leads many to believe that any old computer, no matter how ancient, can be revived by simply installing any Linux distribution on it. However, that isn’t really true—lightweight options exist, but a large share of modern distros are actually fairly demanding.
Those demanding distros will boot, but that doesn’t mean your PC that lags with Windows 11 is going to miraculously become a zippy, modern PC once you install Linux. These are 5 distros I’d recommend you avoid if you’re running older hardware and want to get the best performance.
Qubes OS
Security through virtualization is very demanding
Qubes OS is designed as a security-first OS that isolates your activities into separate virtual machines (qubes) using a hypervisor. In both theory and reality, that approach does offer some security benefits: your banking, email, and general browsing have their own isolated “world,” so a security breach in one can’t affect the others.
In practice, however, Qubes relies on hardware virtualization features like Intel VT-x or AMD-V. Older PCs either lack those features entirely or have implementations that are slow by comparison. Additionally, running multiple VMs simultaneously requires significant RAM—far more than what a 4GB (or even 8GB) machine can offer. When you combine an older, slower CPU and limited RAM with the resources required by qubes, the system could become unusable.
You should reserve Qubes for a modern machine with more resources available. If you are working with an old PC, you are better off using a lighter conventional distro instead.
- Storage capacity
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2TB
- Hardware Interface
-
PCIE x 4
- Compatible Devices
-
Laptop, Motherboards
- Brand
-
Western Digital
- TBW
-
7300 MB/s
- Dimensions
-
3.15″L x 0.87″W x 0.09″Th
The WD_Black 2TB SSD is great for gaming. It offers read speeds of up to 7,300 mb/s and features an optional heatsink. The drive includes the wd_black dashboard software for monitoring health and customizing RGB lighting on compatible models.
Garuda Linux
Garuda is a maximalist take on Linux
Garuda is an Arch-based, rolling-release distro known for its “Dragonized” KDE Plasma layout and a huge number of preinstalled gaming optimizations. It ships with the Linux Zen kernel and ZRAM out of the box to squeeze every bit of performance for gamers. If you have the hardware for it and like the aesthetics, it is actually a great distro.
The problem is that Garuda is basically resource-heavy by design. It features full animations, blur effects, and more, which will consume more resources than a visually minimalist distro. ZRAM compresses memory, which can help with multitasking, but it also requires CPU resources to do so. On an old processor, that approach may actually be a net negative.
If you have a modern multicore machine with 8GB (or more) of RAM and an SSD, Garuda is a great way to get a flashy Arch system up and running without too much work. If you’re using an older PC, stick to Garuda’s Xfce edition or a distro that is purpose-built for older, slower hardware.
Fedora atomic desktops (Silverblue and Kinoite)
Immutable is great for security but will tax your storage
Fedora Silverblue and Kinoite use an immutable, atomic model. Instead of a regular filesystem, the root is read-only, and system changes happen by layering or reinstalling entire images in all-or-nothing chunks.
This model provides incredible safety (and rollback capabilities, if something breaks), but it comes at a hardware cost. The atomic model keeps multiple snapshots while you’re updating. If you are running a mechanical hard drive, those tasks will make the system lag unbelievably. Additionally, modern Fedora desktops have RAM overhead that will be tough on systems with only 4GB of RAM.
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You should save Silverblue and Kinoite for machines with fast SSDs and at least 8GB of RAM. If you want the Fedora experience on old hardware, use a traditional Fedora distro with the most minimalist desktop environment that you can find.
Kali Linux
A penetration-testing distro is a waste on a regular PC
Kali Linux is a specialized workstation built for offensive security and digital forensics. It comes preloaded with hundreds of tools designed for specific professional tasks, or tasks you may want to do if you’re an avid self-hoster.
The mistake that many make is installing Kali as a daily driver on an old PC. Because it is a purpose-built tool, the bundled services consume resources that you simply won’t use for browsing or office work. You end up paying a “resource tax” in the form of idle background processes and maintenance costs for capabilities that serve no purpose in a general-use environment.
If you want to learn security on an old PC, you should run Kali via a Live USB or in a VM on demand. For your actual daily computing, use a lightweight general-purpose distro and only use the Kali tools when you actually need them.
KDE Neon
The newest desktop look requires more resources than your old PC has
KDE Neon provides an Ubuntu base featuring the cutting-edge KDE Plasma releases. It is a fantastic desktop experience that goes toe-to-toe with Windows 11 or macOS Tahoe. However, there is a bit of a problem.
The issue here is that “cutting edge” usually means “more demanding.” For example, the transition to Plasma 6 saw idle RAM consumption jump significantly on many systems (about 1GB on my laptop). Modern Qt 6 rendering and complex compositing effects lean heavily on GPU and RAM—resources that older integrated graphics or even older dedicated graphics cards may struggle with.
If you are a Plasma enthusiast on old hardware, disabling all desktop effects will help cut down on the resource overhead.
Pick your lightweight distros carefully
Just because an operating system is “Linux” doesn’t inherently mean that it is lightweight. Each of these distributions has something about it that makes it a potential problem with older hardware.
Before you install a new OS, double-check your machine’s specs against the recommendations for that distro, and whether you actually need the demanding features the distro offers. Most of these distros have lighter variants that get you many of the benefits without the hardware requirements. I’d recommend testing those out on a USB drive before loading up your PC with a distro. It may not be able to run well.

