Wi-Fi works by your router broadcasting a wireless signal that your PC or laptop connects to. When Wi-Fi suddenly stops working, the connection between your device and that signal has broken down somewhere along the chain — from the internet provider, through the router, through the wireless adapter in your PC, and finally into Windows itself. The good news is that the vast majority of sudden Wi-Fi failures are temporary and fixable without any hardware replacement.
- Your router or modem has frozen and needs a restart
- Your internet service provider (ISP) is experiencing an outage in your area
- Windows has lost or corrupted its network settings
- The Wi-Fi adapter in your PC has been accidentally disabled
- A Windows Update has changed or disrupted your network drivers
- Your PC has connected to the wrong network or a hidden/saved network
- The Wi-Fi signal is present but your IP address was not assigned correctly
- Physical interference from other devices, thick walls, or distance from the router
Do not dive into advanced settings yet. These three quick checks resolve the majority of sudden Wi-Fi failures in under two minutes.
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1Check another device right now. Grab your phone, tablet, or another laptop and check if it has Wi-Fi. If other devices also have no Wi-Fi, the problem is your router or your ISP — not your PC. If other devices are connected fine, the problem is isolated to your PC or laptop.
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2Restart your router and modem. Unplug the power cable from the back of your router (and modem if they are separate devices). Wait a full 30 seconds, then plug back in. Wait 2 minutes for it to fully restart before testing your connection again.
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3Check the Wi-Fi switch or button on your laptop. Many laptops have a physical Wi-Fi toggle key (often Fn + a function key with a Wi-Fi symbol) or a physical switch on the side of the device. It is very easy to accidentally switch this off. Make sure Wi-Fi is enabled.
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4Check Windows Wi-Fi is turned on. Click the network icon in the bottom-right corner of your taskbar (the icon may show as a globe or disconnected bars). Make sure the Wi-Fi toggle is switched ON and that Airplane Mode is OFF.
- Do NOT immediately start changing advanced network settings or resetting Windows network configurations — start with the simple checks first, as these resolve most issues.
- Do NOT uninstall your Wi-Fi adapter driver unless you have confirmed it is the cause — removing it without a backup plan may leave you with no way to reconnect.
- Do NOT factory reset your router as a first step — this will erase all your Wi-Fi passwords and settings and is rarely necessary.
- Do NOT assume your Wi-Fi card has physically failed — driver and software issues are far more common causes of sudden Wi-Fi loss than hardware failure.
- Do NOT leave your PC connected to a weak or unstable signal while troubleshooting — this can make the problem appear intermittent and harder to diagnose.
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1Confirm whether this is a device problem or a network problem.
Test Wi-Fi on at least one other device. If other devices connect fine, move to Step 2. If nothing in your home has Wi-Fi, skip to Step 6 (router troubleshooting). -
2Restart your PC.
A simple restart clears temporary glitches in Windows networking. Go to Start > Power > Restart — not Shut Down, as Shut Down on modern Windows does not always fully reset network components. -
3Forget and reconnect to your Wi-Fi network.
Click the network icon in the taskbar. Find your Wi-Fi network name, right-click it (or click the arrow/details), and select Forget. Then reconnect by clicking the network name and entering your Wi-Fi password. This clears any corrupted connection profile. -
4Run the Windows Network Troubleshooter.
Go to Settings > System > Troubleshoot > Other troubleshooters (Windows 11) or Settings > Update & Security > Troubleshoot > Internet Connections (Windows 10). Run the troubleshooter and apply any fixes it suggests. While not always definitive, it often identifies and corrects common issues automatically. -
5Reset your IP address and DNS settings using Command Prompt.
Open the Start menu, type cmd, right-click Command Prompt and choose Run as administrator. Then type each of the following commands one at a time, pressing Enter after each:netsh winsock reset
netsh int ip reset
ipconfig /release
ipconfig /flushdns
ipconfig /renewOnce all commands have run, restart your PC and test your Wi-Fi again. These commands reset the core network stack in Windows and resolve a large number of connectivity issues.
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6Restart your router and modem properly.
If you have not already done this, unplug the power from your router. If your router and modem are separate devices, unplug both. Wait 30–60 seconds. Plug the modem in first, wait one minute, then plug the router in. Wait a further two minutes for both devices to fully restart and re-establish a connection to your ISP before testing again. -
7Check whether your Wi-Fi adapter is enabled in Windows.
Right-click the Start button and select Device Manager. Expand the Network Adapters section. Look for your Wi-Fi adapter — it will usually have “Wireless” or “Wi-Fi” in its name. If there is a grey arrow icon next to it, it has been disabled. Right-click it and select Enable device. -
8Update or roll back your Wi-Fi adapter driver.
In Device Manager, right-click your Wi-Fi adapter and select Update driver > Search automatically for drivers. If a recent Windows Update may have changed your driver, you can also select Properties > Driver tab > Roll Back Driver to return to the previous version. Restart your PC after making any driver changes. -
9Check for Windows Updates that may have caused the issue.
Go to Settings > Windows Update > View Update History. If a recent update was installed around the same time your Wi-Fi stopped working, this update may be the cause. You can uninstall recent updates by going to View Update History > Uninstall Updates and removing the most recent one. Restart and test your Wi-Fi again. -
10Test with a wired Ethernet connection.
If you have an Ethernet cable available, plug it directly from your router into your PC. If your internet works over the cable but not over Wi-Fi, this confirms the issue is specifically with the wireless side — either the adapter, its driver, or the router’s wireless function — rather than your internet service itself. -
11Check whether your ISP has an outage.
If both wired and wireless connections fail, and other devices in your home are also affected, your internet service provider may be experiencing an outage in your area. Contact your ISP by phone or via a mobile data connection to report the issue and ask for an estimated resolution time. There is nothing to fix on your end in this case — you simply need to wait for service to be restored.
Your Wi-Fi connection has been restored when you see all of the following:
- ✅ The Wi-Fi icon in the taskbar shows a connected signal (bars filled in, no warning symbol)
- ✅ You can open a website or use an online service without errors
- ✅ Other devices in your home are also connecting successfully
- ✅ The connection remains stable — it does not drop after a few minutes
- ✅ No error messages appear when you try to browse or connect
Once reconnected, monitor your connection for the next hour. If it drops again, there may be an underlying issue with your router, your ISP, or your wireless adapter that needs further investigation.