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Windows 11

WiFi Not Working After Windows 11 Update? Here Are the REAL Fixes (2026 Guide)

Did your WiFi start disconnecting after installing the latest Windows 11 update?

Does your internet work perfectly on your phone, but on your laptop it keeps dropping or shows “Connected, No Internet”?

You’re not alone.

This is one of the most common issues after major Windows 11 updates — especially when Windows automatically replaces your original WiFi driver with a newer Microsoft version.

In this complete guide, I’ll show you all working methods to fix WiFi problems after a Windows update.


Why Windows 11 Update Breaks WiFi

After installing a cumulative or feature update (like 25H2 or newer builds), Windows often:

  • Replaces your original WiFi driver

  • Installs a generic Microsoft driver

  • Changes power management settings

  • Resets network configurations

The result?

  • WiFi disconnecting randomly

  • Unstable internet

  • WiFi connected but no internet

  • WiFi adapter disappearing

Let’s fix it.


Method 1: Roll Back the WiFi Driver (Best & Fastest Fix)

This is the most common solution.

Steps:

  1. Right-click This PC

  2. Click Manage

  3. Go to Device Manager

  4. Expand Network Adapters

  5. Right-click your WiFi adapter (Intel / Realtek / etc.)

  6. Click Properties

  7. Go to the Driver tab

  8. Click Roll Back Driver

If the issue started right after the update, this usually fixes it instantly.


Method 2: Manually Select the Previous Driver

If “Roll Back” is not available:

  1. Open Device Manager

  2. Right-click your WiFi adapter

  3. Click Update Driver

  4. Choose Browse my computer

  5. Select Let me pick from a list

  6. Choose the older manufacturer driver (NOT Microsoft)

  7. Click Next

Windows often installs a newer driver that doesn’t work properly. Switching back to the original one fixes the instability.


Method 3: Uninstall the WiFi Device Completely

If switching drivers doesn’t work:

  1. Open Device Manager

  2. Right-click the WiFi adapter

  3. Click Uninstall Device

  4. Confirm removal

After restarting, Windows will reinstall the original driver automatically.


Method 4: Disable Power Saving (Very Important)

Sometimes Windows aggressively disables your WiFi to save power.

Fix it:

  1. Open Device Manager

  2. Right-click WiFi adapter

  3. Click Properties

  4. Go to Power Management

  5. Uncheck:

    Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power

Click OK and restart.


Method 5: Install the Manufacturer WiFi Driver

This is one of the most stable solutions.

How to do it:

  1. Check your laptop model (usually on the back cover)

  2. Go to the official manufacturer website
    (Dell, HP, Lenovo, ASUS, etc.)

  3. Search your model

  4. Download the WiFi driver for Windows 11

  5. Install it manually

Manufacturer drivers are usually more stable than Windows Update drivers.


Method 6: Enable WLAN AutoConfig Service

If your WiFi disappears completely:

  1. Press Start and search Services

  2. Find WLAN AutoConfig

  3. Double-click it

  4. Set Startup type to Automatic

  5. Click Start

  6. Restart your PC

If this service is disabled, your WiFi may not appear at all.


Method 7: Network Reset

If you’re connected but have no internet:

  1. Go to Settings

  2. Click Network & Internet

  3. Scroll down to Advanced network settings

  4. Click Network reset

  5. Restart your computer

This resets your entire network configuration.


Method 8: Command Prompt Network Fix

Open Command Prompt as Administrator and run:

netsh int ip reset
netsh winsock reset
ipconfig /flushdns

Restart your computer after running these commands.

These reset your TCP/IP stack and fix corrupted network configurations.


Method 9: Check Proxy or VPN Settings

Sometimes malware or misconfiguration causes “Connected but no internet”.

  1. Search Internet Options

  2. Go to Connections

  3. Click LAN Settings

  4. Make sure:

    • Proxy server is unchecked

    • No unknown VPN is active

Click OK and test again.


Method 10: Uninstall the Windows Update

If nothing works, the update itself may be broken.

  1. Go to Settings

  2. Click Windows Update

  3. Open Update History

  4. Click Uninstall Updates

  5. Remove the latest update

This is the last resort — but it works if the update caused the issue.


Bonus Tip

Make sure:

  • WiFi is not disabled via keyboard shortcut (Fn + WiFi key)

  • Airplane mode is off

  • The adapter is enabled in Network Connections


Final Thoughts

Most of the time, the issue is caused by Windows replacing your original WiFi driver with a generic one.

Rolling back the driver or installing the manufacturer version fixes the problem in minutes.

If this guide helped you, consider checking our other Windows 11 troubleshooting tutorials.

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