Topic cluster

Wi-Fi and networking Windows guides and reports

Browse 21 Windows pages around wi-fi and networking with clearer navigation and tighter internal linking.

Network

DNS problems break websites but the Wi-Fi stays connected

If DNS resolution fails, Windows still shows a connection even though sites and apps cannot resolve addresses.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

How to reset the Wi-Fi adapter safely in Windows

A targeted adapter reset is often enough when the wireless stack is stuck without needing a full PC reset.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Metered connection setting causes update or app issues

A metered profile can delay updates, cloud sync, and background tasks, which looks like broken internet to many users.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Mobile hotspot does not work in Windows

Hotspot issues often involve adapter capability, airplane mode leftovers, or a network stack that needs to be reset.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

VPN causes Wi-Fi or internet problems in Windows

A VPN can break routing, DNS, split tunneling, captive portal login, or local network visibility.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

When to reinstall or reset wi‑fi components in Windows

A reinstall or reset helps some stubborn wi‑fi issues, but it should come after simpler checks so you do not add more noise.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi-Fi broke after a Windows update

Updates can swap drivers, change network policy, or expose an adapter problem that had been hidden before.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi-Fi keeps disconnecting in Windows

Power saving, weak signal, roaming behavior, or buggy drivers can cause repeated Wi-Fi drops.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi-Fi network does not appear in Windows

Hidden SSIDs, weak signal, driver issues, and adapter state problems can prevent a network from appearing at all.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi-Fi says connected but there is no internet

A Windows PC can stay associated to Wi-Fi while DNS, gateway access, firewall rules, or the upstream connection are broken.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi-Fi speed is much slower on one Windows PC

One device can be slow because of driver issues, band selection, VPN overhead, or background traffic.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi-Fi stops working after sleep or wake

Resume from sleep can leave the wireless adapter in a bad state until it is reset or the driver is refreshed.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi‑Fi broke after a major Windows feature update

Feature updates can rework drivers, policies, shell behavior, and app integrations, which is why wi‑fi can break right after an upgrade.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi‑Fi only acts up during startup or right after sign-in

Problems that happen only near startup often involve launchers, delayed services, profile sync, or a system still finishing sign-in tasks.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi‑Fi problem appears only on battery power in Windows

Battery saver, reduced performance policy, or power-managed hardware can make wi‑fi behave differently when the PC is unplugged.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi‑Fi problem only affects one Windows user account

If wi‑fi works for one account but not another, the issue is often profile-level settings, cache, or permissions rather than the hardware itself.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi‑Fi problem returns after every reboot in Windows

When wi‑fi seems fixed until the next reboot, startup tasks, policy, cached state, or a broken service may be reapplying the problem.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi‑Fi settings are greyed out or missing in Windows

Greyed-out or missing wi‑fi settings can point to edition limits, policy, account state, hardware detection, or a service that did not load correctly.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi‑Fi works in some apps but fails in one app on Windows

When wi‑fi fails in only one program, app permissions, per-app routing, cached settings, or that app's own update path is often involved.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Wi‑Fi works on another PC but not on this Windows PC

If wi‑fi works elsewhere, the failing PC likely has a local settings, driver, account, or policy problem rather than a universal device failure.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets
Network

Windows cannot connect to a Wi-Fi network

Connection failures commonly come from wrong saved credentials, captive portals, incompatible security modes, or an unstable adapter.

  • check whether other devices can use the same network normally
  • forget the network and reconnect with the correct password
  • restart the router and the Windows PC before deeper resets