Turn one big monitor into several.
Split your display into zones, keep fullscreen apps boxed inside them, and share just one region — from a single tiny native exe.
A 49″ 32:9 panel (5120×1440) as three real monitors — default 25% · 50% · 25%
Everything a multi-monitor rig does, from one panel
No OS trickery, no giant background bundle — just fast, native window management.
Zone layouts
25/50/25, 50/50, thirds — or build your own 2D grids in the FancyZones-style editor.
Fullscreen confinement
Maximize or F11 any app and it snaps into its zone instead of taking over the whole screen.
Drag-to-snap
Hold Shift while dragging; the target zone highlights and the window snaps in on release.
Share a single zone
Mirror just one region into Zoom, Teams, or OBS — press Ctrl+Alt+1 and pick it in the native share picker.
Custom layout editor
Click a shared border to merge two zones, an internal line to split one apart. Save unlimited named layouts.
Global hotkeys
Start/stop, cycle layouts, and shove the focused window between zones — all rebindable with conflict checking.
Three steps, zero setup
Launch it
The exe starts confining immediately with the default 25/50/25 layout and thin blue zone borders.
Fullscreen anything
Maximize or F11 an app; it fills exactly its zone, like a real monitor — the rest of the screen stays yours.
Share or snap
Shift-drag windows between zones, or toggle a live share of any single zone into your meeting.
One tool instead of three
See it in action
Try free for 7 days
Everything works during the trial — nothing crippled. Then pick the plan that fits.
- All features, always updated
- Auto-updates via the Store
- Cancel anytime
- One-time payment, yours forever
- All future updates included
- Pays for itself in ~15 months
Does VirtualZones need a driver or admin rights?
No. It is a single ~180 KB native exe with zero dependencies — no virtual-display driver, no .NET runtime, no admin, and no install. The OS never knows your monitor was split.
Will it confine fullscreen video calls and presentations?
Yes. Maximized windows, PowerPoint slideshows, borderless-fullscreen video players, and Firefox F11 all snap into their zone. Chrome and Edge F11 are the one exception — Chromium re-asserts full-monitor bounds, so maximize the browser instead.
How is sharing a single zone different from screen sharing?
VirtualZones exposes one zone as its own window in Zoom, Teams, or OBS’s native share picker, so you share exactly that region — with whatever is underneath it — instead of your whole screen. Toggle it with Ctrl+Alt+1 (or 2, 3…).
How much does VirtualZones cost?
There is a 7-day free trial with everything unlocked. After that you can subscribe for $1.99/month via the Microsoft Store, or buy a one-time $29.99 lifetime license via Lemon Squeezy.
Ready to reclaim your big monitor?
Download the free trial and split your screen in under a minute.
Download VirtualZones