Fedora 43 Beta Released: A Preview of What's Ahead
Introduction
Fedoraβs beta releases offer one of the earliest glimpses into the next major version of the distribution β letting users and developers poke, test, and report issues before the final version ships. With Fedora 43 Beta, released on September 16, 2025, the community begins the final stretch toward the stable Fedora 43.
This beta is largely feature-complete: developers hope it will closely match what the final release looks like (barring last-minute fixes).Β The goal is to surface regression bugs, UX issues, and compatibility problems before Fedora 43 is broadly adopted.
Release & Availability
The Fedora Project published the beta across multiple editions and media β Workstation, KDE Plasma, Server, IoT, Cloud, and spins/labs where applicable. ISO images are available for download from the official Fedora servers.
Users already running Fedora 42 can upgrade via the DNF system-upgrade mechanism.Β Some spins (e.g. Mate or i3) are not fully available across all architectures yet.
Because itβs a beta, users should be ready to encounter bugs. Fedora encourages testers to file issues via the QA mailing list or Fedoraβs issue tracking infrastructure.
Major New Features & Changes
Fedora 43 Beta brings many updates under the hood β some in visible user features, others in core tooling and system behavior.
Kernel, Desktop & Session Updates-
Fedora 43 Beta is built on Linux kernel 6.17.
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The Workstation edition features GNOME 49.
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In a bold shift, Fedora removes GNOME X11 packages for the Workstation, making Wayland-only the default and only session for GNOME. Existing users are migrated to Wayland.
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On KDE, Fedora 43 Beta ships with KDE Plasma 6.4 in the Plasma edition.
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Fedoraβs Anaconda installer gets a WebUI by default for all Spins, providing a more unified and modern install experience across desktop variants.
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The installer now uses DNF5 internally, phasing out DNF4 which is now in maintenance mode.
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Auto-updates are enabled by default in Fedora Kinoite, ensuring that systems apply updates seamlessly in the background with minimal user intervention.
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The Python version in Fedora 43 Beta moves to 3.14, an early adoption to catch bugs before the upstream release.