0XC0262110

Fix 0XC0262110: GPU allocation can't be used from current segment

Windows Errors Intermediate 👁 1 views 📅 May 28, 2026

This error means your graphics driver or video memory is corrupted. I'll show you how to clear it fast.

This error is a pain

I know seeing 0XC0262110 mid-game or render is infuriating. It usually means something in your graphics stack got stomped — a driver bug, corrupted video memory (VRAM), or a bad allocation from an old app. The fix is faster than you think.

The real fix: clean driver reinstall

Skip the Windows Update driver trick. You need to nuke the current driver completely. Here's the exact sequence that works on Windows 10 22H2 and Windows 11 23H2:

  1. Download Display Driver Uninstaller (DDU) from guru3d.com (the official site). Run it in Safe Mode.
  2. Before booting into Safe Mode, unplug your internet cable or disable Wi-Fi — Windows loves reinstalling the broken driver immediately.
  3. Reboot into Safe Mode (hold Shift while clicking Restart, then Troubleshoot > Advanced options > Startup Settings > Restart > press 4).
  4. Launch DDU. Select your GPU vendor (NVIDIA, AMD, or Intel) and click Clean and restart.
  5. After reboot, install the latest driver from your GPU vendor's site — not Windows Update. For NVIDIA, use the Studio driver if you're not gaming; it's more stable. For AMD, use the Adrenalin recommended version.

That's it. This clears any corrupt allocations in the kernel-mode driver that cause 0XC0262110.

Why this works

This error fires when the graphics driver tries to move an allocation (like a texture or buffer) from one memory segment to another and fails — usually because the destination is invalid or the source has been freed. A corrupted driver can leave stale pointers in the GPU memory manager. DDU removes every trace of the old driver, including registry keys and leftover files that normal uninstallers miss.

Less common causes

Overclocking gone wrong

If the clean driver didn't fix it, your VRAM might be unstable. Test with a tool like OCCT or FurMark — if you see artifacts or crashes, lower your memory clock by 50-100 MHz. I've seen this error pop on RTX 3080s with aggressive memory overclocks in games like Cyberpunk 2077.

Faulty GPU hardware

On laptops, this can mean the GPU is dying. Run dxdiag from the Start menu, check the Display tab for any error codes (e.g., 43, 12). If you see one, your GPU needs physical replacement — no software fix will save it.

DirectX version mismatch

Old apps (pre-2010) sometimes trigger this on modern GPUs. Force DirectX 11 by adding -dx11 to the game's launch options in Steam or creating a shortcut with "C:\Program Files\YourGame\game.exe" -dx11. In Modern Warfare 2 (2009), this was the only way to stop the error on Windows 10.

Prevention tips

  • Never install GPU drivers via Windows Update. Always download from NVIDIA, AMD, or Intel directly.
  • Disable hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling in Windows Graphics settings (Settings > System > Display > Graphics > Change default graphics settings). This feature has a history of triggering allocation errors on certain driver versions.
  • Check your RAM with MemTest86 if the error keeps coming back. Bad system memory can corrupt GPU allocations too.

If you tried all this and still see 0XC0262110, it's almost certainly hardware failure. Back up your data and start planning a GPU replacement. Been there — it sucks, but a clean fix saves you weeks of frustration.

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