Your PS5 is about to ask for a restart. Sony has started pushing system software update 26.04-13.42.00 to consoles today, July 1, and the rollout is phased, meaning some players will see it before others. If you haven't been prompted yet, don't panic.

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What the patch actually does
Here's the lowdown: the official patch notes are brief. Sony's description reads, "We've improved system software performance and stability." That's it.
No new features, no UI overhaul, no surprise additions. This is a maintenance update, the kind Sony pushes regularly to tighten security, squash background bugs, and keep the hardware running cleanly. The download weighs in at just over 1.2 GB, which is consistent with the previous system update.
These stability patches don't always make headlines, but they matter. Sony has been consistent about rolling them out across the PS5's life, and they often address vulnerabilities or performance quirks that most players never notice because the fix arrives before the problem becomes obvious.
How to grab it if your console hasn't prompted you yet
The PS5 handles updates automatically by default, but if yours hasn't downloaded the patch, you can trigger it manually. Head to Settings > System > System Software > System Software Update and Settings. From there, you can check for updates directly or enable automatic downloads and installs so future patches handle themselves.
The phased rollout means some regions will receive the prompt before others, so if your console hasn't flagged anything yet, give it a few hours.
Why this update matters more than it looks
There's a bigger context here worth keeping in mind. Sony has confirmed it won't be selling the PS6 at a significant loss, and component costs for that machine are reportedly orbiting the $1,000 mark. That means PS5 owners are likely sitting with their current hardware for longer than previous console generations demanded.
With that in mind, Sony keeping the PS5 software stack tight and secure through regular updates is genuinely good news. A stable, well-maintained console holds up better over a longer ownership cycle, and right now that cycle looks like it's stretching further than anyone initially expected.
What this means for gamers is simple: your PS5 has more runway than it might have seemed six months ago, and Sony appears committed to maintaining it.
If you want to get the most out of your PS5 while you're waiting for that update to install, check out our Ghost of Yotei best PS5 settings guide or the Starfield PS5 guide covering DualSense features and PS5 Pro modes. For everything else, the full gaming guides hub has you covered across platforms and genres.








