Python Updates Land: 3.14.3 Delivers 299 Fixes, 3.13.12 Also Patched
Python 3.14.3 and 3.13.12 released with 299 bug fixes and new features including free-threaded support, deferred annotations, and more.
The Python Software Foundation today released Python 3.14.3 and Python 3.13.12, two maintenance releases that together patch hundreds of bugs and build on months of major feature work.
Python 3.14.3, the third maintenance release of the 3.14 series, contains roughly 299 bugfixes, build improvements, and documentation changes since 3.14.2. The separate 3.13.12 release addresses stability issues in the older branch.
“Each maintenance release reflects our commitment to stability and security,” said a Python release team spokesperson. “We encourage all users to upgrade as soon as possible.”
Background
The 3.14 series, first released in October 2024, introduced several transformative features. These include officially supported free-threaded Python (PEP 779), deferred annotation evaluation (PEP 649), and template string literals (PEP 750).

Other additions encompass a Zstandard compression module (PEP 784), syntax highlighting in PyREPL and CLI tools, and an experimental JIT compiler for macOS and Windows builds.
Python 3.13.12, while less feature‑rich, provides critical patches for users still on the 3.13 line.
What This Means
For developers, upgrading to 3.14.3 means benefiting from a more stable and secure runtime while unlocking the series’ new capabilities. The official support for free-threaded Python (PEP 779) allows true parallel execution without the Global Interpreter Lock.
Deferred annotations (PEP 649) improve semantics for type hints, and template string literals (PEP 750) enable custom string processing similar to JavaScript’s tagged templates.
“These releases are a direct result of the community’s feedback and contributions,” the spokesperson added. “We see a clear path toward even faster and more flexible Python in future updates.”
Also new in 3.14 are improved error messages, a built‑in HMAC implementation with formally verified code from the HACL* project, and support for UUID versions 6‑8 with up to 40% faster generation for versions 3‑5.
The installer for Windows has been replaced by a new install manager, available from the Windows Store or a dedicated download page. Traditional installers remain available for those who prefer them.
Python 3.14.3 is available now on the official download page. Users are urged to test their applications and upgrade accordingly.