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How To Fix WIFI Drops On Your Windows PC Easily

how to fix wifi issue on laptop desktop windows

how to fix wifi issue on laptop desktop windows

You’re browsing the internet, watching YouTube, gaming, and all of a sudden, your WIFI drops or disconnects on your laptop or desktop. You check your phone’s WIFI to see if that has dropped too. Strange, your phone’s WIFI and all other devices still have WIFI, just not your laptop or desktop. Sound familiar? Then follow the steps below to resolve the issue on your Windows device.

Don’t want to read? Check my YouTube video walkthrough instead:

What Causes Your WIFI To Drop?

While this issue mainly occurs on laptops, it can also affect desktop computers, primarily if the desktop uses WIFI through a USB WIFI ethernet adapter.

The most common reason for this issue is that Windows limits power to the device responsible for providing WIFI, which can be a wireless card or a USB WIFI adapter.

Let’s quickly fix that.

Step 1 – Disable Wireless Network Power Saving

To complete this step, we will need to access Device Manager in Windows by following the steps below:

Open Device Manager on Windows
Fix WIFI in Device Manager by Modifying Wireless Properties
Disable Dynamic MIMO Power Save to Fix WIFI Issues
Fix WIFI on Windows – Power Management Options

Congratulations, you have completed Step 1. Complete Step 2 to finish the fix.

Step 2 – Adjust Windows Power Options

This is the last step in the fix, and it requires adjusting Windows Power Options for the computer as a whole.

Fix Windows 10 WIFI drop by changing Power Plan options
Fix Windows 10 WIFI disconnects by changing USB Selective Suspend Settings

Laptop users, please note that you will experience some reduced battery life while your laptop is not plugged in due to these settings, since we are telling Windows to not limit power in certain areas.

Summing Up

After making the changes outlined in Step 1 & Step 2, you should no longer face any wifi drops or disconnects relating to Windows. If you still experience these issues while other devices on your network are functioning properly, the hardware that is responsible for WIFI may be to blame.

Desktop users can try to use a different USB WIFI adapter to see if the issue resolves. For laptop users, it is harder to replace the hardware since it may be on the motherboard, or difficult to access. To rule out defective hardware as an issue, laptop users could also buy a USB WIFI adapter and plug it into the laptop to see if that separate device works instead of using the built-in WIFI device in the laptop.

If you are using a USB WIFI adapter, consider using it on another computer to see if the issue still occurs to figure out if the USB WIFI adapter is at fault, if possible.

If you have followed all of the steps and are still experiencing WIFI drops only on your computer while your phone and other devices retain their WIFI, please leave a comment below with more details, and I will try to offer more troubleshooting steps to try.

Good luck!

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