Citrix Xenapp Web Plugin May 2026

:: Check installed plugin versions (Windows) reg query "HKLM\SOFTWARE\Citrix\Plugins\XenApp" /v Version :: Verify ActiveX control is registered reg query "HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\App Paths\wfica32.exe"

Here is a deep dive into what it was, how it worked, and why it eventually became obsolete. The XenApp Web Plugin (often just called the "Web Interface Plugin") was an ActiveX control (for Internet Explorer) and a NPAPI plugin (for Firefox) that acted as the client-side connector between a user’s browser and a Citrix Web Interface server. citrix xenapp web plugin

Note: This plugin is a legacy component (circa 2008–2014), largely replaced by Citrix Receiver and now Citrix Workspace. However, it is still relevant for environments running older versions like XenApp 5, 6, or 6.5. If you are managing a legacy Citrix environment (XenApp 6.5 or earlier), you have encountered the Citrix XenApp Web Plugin . Before the era of the unified Citrix Receiver, this plugin was the primary gateway for end-users to access published applications and desktops via a web browser. :: Check installed plugin versions (Windows) reg query

Have you inherited a XenApp 6.5 environment? Share your war stories in the comments. However, it is still relevant for environments running

:: Re-register the control (IE 32-bit only) regsvr32 "C:\Program Files (x86)\Citrix\ICAClient\Plugins\wficat.cab\wfica.ocx" For its time (2005–2012), the XenApp Web Plugin was a clever solution. It turned a clunky ICA file download into a one-click web experience. But by 2015, it was a legacy liability—an insecure, browser-bound bottleneck.

:: Clear plugin cache (common fix for "cannot launch app") del /q "%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Citrix\Plugins\Cache*.*"

Do not invest time in fixing it. Invest time in migrating off it. Modern Citrix Workspace app + StoreFront or HTML5 access is faster, more secure, and infinitely less frustrating.