Get your taxes done using TurboTax

Answer is no. My 10 year experience is that eventually Microsoft updates kill the dual boot with loss of everything not backed up externally.  Lucky to make it 1 year/episode.  fyi. Ms employee Linus Torvald helped write Windows 10. In the last 10 years MS has moved toward a linux core to its database and servers. A few years ago MS purchased Canonical - the major Linux repository. In 2020 MS became the major contributor to Github.  Looks like a trend there. Not surprised: 1 OS to rule them all!

Recently  Q4OS  claims to be  the preferred distro for dual boot - even tandem, simultaneous boot running side by side. (It only blue screened for me.)

Microsoft killed support for VM long ago after WinXP. Win 7had a settings option you had to find.  Virtual Box even on Linux keeps becoming unstable. Gave up on that a few years ago. My son likes PCeM but it has hit hard times lately for him. I think it is hard for these VM writers to keep up with MS updates.

Six years ago I purchased a hard-drive switch to choose my hard drive. One for windows. One for Linux. No dual boot complications. No cross security issues. No VM. You'll need an external drive with settings of 'share' under Windows, to pass data in a two step fashion. (But modern Mother boards are not designed for it. They come set for Microsoft ONLY. You have to go into Cmos and turn off the MS settings. MS countered that by making those settings a do or die option for windows 11. MB has to be MS only & no dual boot to have Win11. Q4os maybe excepted -if it would work. )