{
  "$type": "site.standard.document",
  "bskyPostRef": {
    "cid": "bafyreigei4kboe7njyckktqbm7p4jjdxylpam65yrie3hal2opb53qcj3i",
    "uri": "at://did:plc:ws6dhxzqnqxu5aqxt4kd27oc/app.bsky.feed.post/3mnjhfobvzgm2"
  },
  "coverImage": {
    "$type": "blob",
    "ref": {
      "$link": "bafkreiehd52nlxwz4xtdatqykszdiplpgawer4nuuylpqsep3cm3bzfwjy"
    },
    "mimeType": "image/png",
    "size": 849038
  },
  "description": "Four reliable ways to refresh your Wi-Fi or Ethernet driver and fix dropouts, slow speeds, and connection errors.",
  "path": "/how-to-update-network-drivers-on-windows-11/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-05T05:57:48.000Z",
  "site": "https://allthings.how",
  "tags": [
    "update drivers through Device Manager",
    "Intel Download Center",
    "Dell Support",
    "HP Support",
    "Lenovo Support"
  ],
  "textContent": "Out-of-date network drivers are a common cause of dropped connections, sluggish speeds, and Wi-Fi that refuses to reconnect after sleep. On Windows 11, refreshing the driver for your wireless or Ethernet adapter takes a few minutes and often clears these problems without touching any router settings. There are four practical ways to do it, and the right one depends on whether you can still get online.\n\n⚡\n\nQuick answer: Press Windows + X, open Device Manager, expand Network adapters, right-click your Wi-Fi or Ethernet adapter, choose Update driver, then pick Search automatically for drivers. Restart when it finishes.\n\n* * *\n\n## Which method to use\n\nEach approach lands the same result, an updated driver, but they differ in how new the driver is and whether you need an internet connection to start. Pick based on your situation.\n\nMethod| Best for| Needs internet on the PC?\n---|---|---\nDevice Manager auto-search| Fastest fix, general use| Yes\nWindows Update optional updates| Stable, tested drivers| Yes\nManufacturer download| The newest available version| Yes (or another PC)\nManual install in Device Manager| No working connection| No (use a saved file)\n\n* * *\n\n## Method 1: Update the network driver in Device Manager\n\nThis is the quickest route and works for both Wi-Fi and wired adapters. Windows checks its own driver store and Windows Update, then installs a newer driver if one exists.\n\n**Step 1:** Press **Windows + X** to open the Power User menu and select **Device Manager**.\n\n**Step 2:** Expand the **Network adapters** category to see your installed devices.\n\n**Step 3:** Right-click your adapter, the Wi-Fi or Ethernet entry, and choose **Update driver**.\n\n**Step 4:** Select **Search automatically for drivers** and follow the on-screen prompts. If a newer driver is found, Windows installs it; otherwise it reports that the best driver is already installed.\n\n* * *\n\n## Method 2: Install network drivers through Windows Update\n\nDrivers delivered through Windows Update are tested for stability, which makes this a safe choice if you want fewer surprises. Network adapter drivers often appear under optional updates rather than the main update list.\n\n**Step 1:** Press **Windows + I** to open **Settings** and go to the **Windows Update** tab.\n\n**Step 2:** Click **Check for updates** so the system pulls the latest list.\n\n**Step 3:** Open **Advanced options** , then select **Optional updates** under the additional options area.\n\n**Step 4:** Expand the **Driver updates** section, tick any network driver listed, and click **Download & install**. Windows handles the rest automatically.\n\nYou can read Microsoft's full walkthrough for driver delivery on the update drivers through Device Manager support page.\n\n* * *\n\n## Method 3: Download the driver from the manufacturer\n\nWhen you need the absolute newest version, perhaps to fix a recent bug or add support for a feature, go straight to the company that made the adapter. First identify the exact model by checking its name under **Network adapters** in Device Manager, then grab the matching Windows 11 driver.\n\nCommon chipset and system makers publish their own downloads:\n\nVendor| Typically covers| Download page\n---|---|---\nIntel| Wi-Fi adapters| Intel Download Center\nDell| Dell laptops and desktops| Dell Support\nHP| HP systems| HP Support\nLenovo| Lenovo systems| Lenovo Support\n\nRealtek and Qualcomm chips are common for Ethernet and combined Wi-Fi/Bluetooth modules, and their drivers are usually also offered through your PC maker's support page. After downloading, run the installer and let it complete, then restart.\n\n⚠️\n\nStick to official vendor sites. Random \"driver finder\" websites often bundle outdated or unsafe files and can leave you worse off than before.\n\n* * *\n\n## Method 4: Manually install a driver when you have no connection\n\nIf the adapter has no working internet, download the correct driver on another device, copy it to a USB drive, and point Windows at the folder. Device Manager no longer searches the web on its own in this flow, so you supply the file.\n\n**Step 1:** On a working computer, download the driver for your adapter model and copy it to external storage.\n\n**Step 2:** On the affected PC, open **Device Manager** , right-click your network adapter, and choose **Update driver**.\n\n**Step 3:** Select **Browse my computer for drivers**.\n\n**Step 4:** Choose the folder that holds the downloaded driver and let Windows install it. If the file is an executable, you can run it directly instead.\n\n* * *\n\n## How to confirm the update worked\n\nAfter installing, restart the PC so the new driver loads cleanly. Then open a web browser and load any page to confirm the connection is stable. You can also reopen Device Manager, right-click the adapter, choose **Properties** , and check the **Driver** tab to verify the version or date has changed.\n\nIf your internet stops working right after an update, roll back to the previous driver from that same **Driver** tab, or use another device to download the correct driver and install it manually. Ethernet is a useful fallback while you sort out a Wi-Fi driver.\n\n* * *\n\n## Common questions\n\nQuestion| Answer\n---|---\nWhy update network drivers?| To fix connection drops, slow speeds, and compatibility problems with newer software or hardware.\nDo drivers update on their own?| Sometimes, through Windows Update, but not always. A manual check is the reliable way to stay current.\nWhat if the internet breaks after updating?| Roll back the driver, or download the right one on another device and install it manually.\n\nA quick driver refresh is one of the lowest-effort fixes for unstable Wi-Fi and random disconnects on Windows 11. Start with the Device Manager auto-search, fall back to Windows Update's optional updates for tested builds, and reach for the manufacturer download only when you need the very latest version.",
  "title": "How to Update Network Drivers on Windows 11",
  "updatedAt": "2026-06-05T05:57:48.906Z"
}