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Lately, my laptop keeps dropping Wi-Fi randomly while all my other devices (phone, tablet, desktop) stay connected just fine. It’s super frustrating because I’m in the middle of work calls or streaming and then bam, no internet. I’ve tried rebooting the router, updating the laptop’s network drivers, and even resetting network settings on the laptop, but nothing seems to stick. I’m running Windows 10, and the Wi-Fi adapter is a pretty standard Intel one. I’ve also checked for any power-saving settings that might be turning off the Wi-Fi to save battery, but those are all disabled. The signal strength looks good when it disconnects, so I don’t think it’s a range problem. Has anyone else dealt with this kind of random Wi-Fi dropout only on one device? What did you do to fix it? Could it be some weird incompatibility or maybe a hidden setting I’m missing? Any tips or tricks would be much appreciated!

On 12/28/2025 at 9:45 AM, TechGuru42 said:

Lately, my laptop keeps dropping Wi-Fi randomly while all my other devices (phone, tablet, desktop) stay connected just fine. It’s super frustrating because I’m in the middle of work calls or streaming and then bam, no internet. I’ve tried rebooting the router, updating the laptop’s network drivers, and even resetting network settings on the laptop, but nothing seems to stick. I’m running Windows 10, and the Wi-Fi adapter is a pretty standard Intel one. I’ve also checked for any power-saving settings that might be turning off the Wi-Fi to save battery, but those are all disabled. The signal strength looks good when it disconnects, so I don’t think it’s a range problem. Has anyone else dealt with this kind of random Wi-Fi dropout only on one device? What did you do to fix it? Could it be some weird incompatibility or maybe a hidden setting I’m missing? Any tips or tricks would be much appreciated!


@TechGuru42, that sounds maddening! Since you’ve ruled out power-saving and signal issues, one thing I’d try is disabling the “Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power” option specifically for your Wi-Fi adapter in Device Manager. Sometimes Windows still toggles that even if the general power plan settings say otherwise.

Also, if your Intel adapter has a proprietary utility or driver suite, make sure it’s fully updated or try uninstalling it and using the default Windows driver instead. I’ve seen weird conflicts there cause random drops. Lastly, check if your router’s firmware is up to date—sometimes certain chipsets have compatibility quirks fixed in updates.

Other folks here mentioned interference or channel conflicts, but since your other devices are fine, it’s probably isolated to the laptop’s config. If you want to test, you could try connecting to a different Wi-Fi network (like a phone hotspot) and see if it still

  • 2 weeks later...
On 12/28/2025 at 9:45 AM, TechGuru42 said:

Lately, my laptop keeps dropping Wi-Fi randomly while all my other devices (phone, tablet, desktop) stay connected just fine. It’s super frustrating because I’m in the middle of work calls or streaming and then bam, no internet. I’ve tried rebooting the router, updating the laptop’s network drivers, and even resetting network settings on the laptop, but nothing seems to stick. I’m running Windows 10, and the Wi-Fi adapter is a pretty standard Intel one. I’ve also checked for any power-saving settings that might be turning off the Wi-Fi to save battery, but those are all disabled. The signal strength looks good when it disconnects, so I don’t think it’s a range problem. Has anyone else dealt with this kind of random Wi-Fi dropout only on one device? What did you do to fix it? Could it be some weird incompatibility or maybe a hidden setting I’m missing? Any tips or tricks would be much appreciated!


@TechGuru42, sounds like a real pain! Since you’ve ruled out power settings and driver updates, one thing I’d check is the Wi-Fi channel your router is using. Sometimes interference from neighbors’ networks or other devices can cause random drops even if signal strength looks fine. You can try switching to a less crowded channel via your router’s admin page.

Also, have you tried disabling any VPN or security software temporarily? I had a similar issue where my firewall was interfering with the connection intermittently. If that’s not it, maybe run a network troubleshooter or check Event Viewer for any related errors around the disconnect times. Sometimes Windows logs can reveal hidden clues.

Would be curious if anyone else here had luck with a USB Wi-Fi adapter as a workaround, just to isolate if it’s a hardware issue with the laptop’s built-in card. Hope you find a fix soon!

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