I have merged your two threads about the same topic.
Firstly:- The Portable is not meant to be installed - (the clue is in the word "Portable").
If you do install it then it will behave like the CCleaner installed versions.
Except that as you note it doesnât have UI buttons for Driver Updater or Performance Optimiser, because those need an installed CCleaner and the Portable is not meant to be installed.
Note that the Software Updater, whether the one in Health Check or the one in Tools, cannot update anything in the Free CCleaner versions anyway.
In Portable (not installed) it canât even check for new sofware versions because it doesnât âphone homeâ, HC ignores that in Portable (not installed) but if you try to use the seperate Tool to do a software scan then you get an error.
Second: As for your above registy tweak*, and whether you can remove the Health Check button from the UI:
Removing the button from the UI can be done but isn't meant to be done, (and you neeed to change more than simply one reg entry), but if you do that then it will just come back again next update.
*As no doubt your registry tweak above will also revert to default with the next CCleaner update.
There is also no guarantee that those reg entries will not be altered (or even renamed or removed) in future.
It's much easier all round to simply install the correct CCleaner and then ignore Health Check if you don't want to use it.
You can easily set CCleaner so that it always shows you Custom Clean on opening, and then you can toally ignore Health Check if you want to.
(I have mine set like that).
Options>Settings>CCleaner Home Screen
![image.png]()
PS. If you do block CCleaners' outgoing connections then certain functions will not work properly or not work at all.
CCleaner needs those connectons to function properly, you either accept that or donât use CCleaner. Your choice.
(But if you do block any/all of the connections then please mention that fact if/when coming back here for help because your CCleaner is then not working as it should do).