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Stop the Bleeding: How Revoking Admin Rights Eliminates Support…

  • 15th June 20267th May 2026

The most time-consuming ticket in your queue is rarely a hardware failure. It’s the PC infection that started when a user installed something they shouldn’t have been able to. Or it’s the broken configuration left behind after someone changed a setting IT can’t trace.

Local administrator rights (the ability to install software, modify system settings, and override security controls) are given to end users far more often than the risk warrants. 

The usual reason is efficiency. 

The practical result is the opposite. Machines that drift from baseline, infections that spread before they are caught, and remediation tickets nobody planned for. Revoking local admin rights directly removes the root cause of most of those tickets.

The Admin Rights and Support Ticket Connection

A standard user account limits what software can be installed, what system settings can be changed, and what processes can run at an elevated level. These limits are not arbitrary friction. They are the boundary that prevents most common problems from ever reaching the helpdesk.

When users have admin rights, those boundaries disappear. 

Software conflicts arise because no approval step exists to catch the incompatibility. Security tools get disabled because a user decided they were slowing things down. Network settings get modified during attempted self-fixes that go wrong. Each of those actions is a predictable support ticket in waiting.

Admin rights are not the cause of every request in the queue. They are the cause of most of the expensive ones.

What the Security Data Shows

The connection between admin rights and security incidents is well-documented, and the numbers make the operational argument clearly.

From 2015 to 2020, the BeyondTrust Microsoft Vulnerabilities Report found that removing administrative privileges could have mitigated 75% of all Critical Microsoft vulnerabilities.

The pattern holds because most critical vulnerabilities require elevated permissions to fully execute. 

An attacker who compromises a standard user account gets access to that user’s data and session. An attacker who compromises an admin account gets the machine, and often the network.

The IBM Cost of a Data Breach Report 2025 found the average US data breach costs $10.22 million, an all-time high for any region globally.

The remediation cost for breaches that originate through compromised endpoints is consistently higher when the affected user holds elevated system privileges. Revoking local admin rights does not eliminate the risk, but it significantly reduces what an attacker or an infected machine can actually do.

The Three Ticket Categories That Disappear

Malware infections and their cleanup

Most ransomware and many Trojan infections require admin-level permissions to install, disable security tools, and spread. A standard user account does not eliminate phishing risk, but it limits what malware can do after it lands. 

An infection on a standard account is typically contained to that user’s profile. On an admin account, the same infection can encrypt shared drives and require a full OS rebuild. 

A contained malware event might mean one ticket and thirty minutes of work. An admin-level infection often means several tickets and multiple hours of technician time.

Self-inflicted configuration breaks

Users with admin rights occasionally try to fix their own problems by changing settings, uninstalling applications, or modifying network configurations. When it goes wrong, IT inherits the result with little visibility into what changed. 

Standard user accounts remove this category of ticket almost entirely, because those changes are no longer possible without an elevation request.

Patch and compliance drift

Endpoints where users have admin rights tend to diverge from the managed baseline over time. 

Software installed outside the approved process does not receive updates through standard management tools. 

Devices accumulate inconsistencies that create additional work during vulnerability scans, audits, and compliance reviews. 

Revoking admin rights and enforcing managed software deployment closes this drift at the source.

But I Need to Install Things

Just-in-time elevation

The concern is legitimate. As a user on your network, you do occasionally need elevated access for specific tasks. 

The answer is not to restore permanent admin rights. It is just-in-time (JIT) elevation, where you get temporary elevated access for a defined task. The request is approved through an automated policy or by IT, and the elevation expires automatically once the task is complete.

This keeps users productive and IT informed. 

Every elevation request is logged. Unapproved actions do not happen silently. The volume and pattern of requests also becomes useful data in its own right, revealing exactly which tasks genuinely require escalation and which ones users were performing only because nothing was stopping them.

What standard users can already do

Standard accounts support normal application use, browser activity, printing, file access, and the vast majority of day-to-day tasks without any escalation at all. 

The friction you may anticipate is usually larger than the friction you actually experience once the change is made and a JIT process handles the edge cases.

What to Do Before You Flip the Switch

Ready to reduce your support ticket volume and tighten endpoint security for your team at the same time? 

Contact us or schedule a consultation to plan a least-privilege rollout that works for your team.

—

Featured Image Credit

This Article has been Republished with Permission from The Technology Press.

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