![How to Update Drivers on Windows 11 [Tutorial]](/images/yt/j-/how-to-update-drivers-on-windows-11-tutorial-o6kzj.jpg)
How to Update Drivers on Windows 11 [Tutorial]
How to Update Drivers on Windows 11 [Tutorial]
Drivers sometimes feel like a headache. It's not always clear how to update drivers, especially because of malicious sites that lure unsuspecting users into downloading malware and viruses that are harmful to your computer. There's a right way to ago about driver updates to ensure this doesn't happen to you.
You might need to update drivers in Windows when a new piece of hardware you've installed doesn't work automatically or maybe after upgrading to a new version of Windows. Updating drivers is also a great troubleshooting step when the device is having some kind of problem or is generating an error, like a Device Manager error code.
Issues addressed in this tutorial:
update drivers windows 11
update Bluetooth drivers windows 11
update AMD chipset drivers windows 11
update intel chipset drivers windows 11
can't update drivers windows 11
update device drivers windows 11
update dell drivers windows 11
disable auto update drivers windows 11
drivers update software for windows 11
drivers update software for windows 11 free
windows 11 update drivers automatically free
update GPU drivers windows 11
update GeForce drivers windows 11
how to update drivers windows 11
hp laptop drivers update windows 11
update hp drivers windows 11
update laptop drivers windows 11
Lenovo drivers update windows 11
update my drivers windows 11
On Windows 11, a device driver is an essential piece of code, which allows the system to interact with a specific hardware (such as graphics card, storage driver, network adapter, Bluetooth, etc.), as well as peripherals, including mice, keyboards, printers, monitors, and many others.
Usually, the detection and installation of device drivers happen automatically using the built-in driver library and the Windows Update service. However, sometimes, you may still need to update some devices manually for a number of reasons. For example, when Windows 11 cannot recognize a component. The device stops working after an upgrade. Windows Update installs a generic package, or you have to apply a critical fix or access a new feature quickly.
This tutorial will apply for computers, laptops, desktops, and tablets running the Windows 11 operating system (Home, Professional, Enterprise, Education) from all supported hardware manufactures, like Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo, Huawei and Samsung.