Audio Does Not Work | Fixes That Restore Sound Fast

If audio does not work, check outputs, volume, app mute, drivers, and device settings to restore sound fast.

Silence hits at the worst time—right before a call, a class, or a movie. This playbook gets your sound back fast with clean steps, clear checks, and fixes that stick. Start with quick wins, then move to OS-level tweaks, app settings, and hardware checks. You’ll know exactly what to do, in what order, and why each step helps.

What To Check First

Quick scan: These take seconds and fix many cases without digging through menus. If you still have silence after this block, move to the OS sections below.

  • Pick The Right Output — Click the speaker icon and select the device you’re actually using (headphones, monitor, dock, Bluetooth).
  • Raise Volume And Unmute — System, app, and hardware dials can each mute you. Turn up the slider and verify no red “X” on the icon.
  • Close And Reopen The App — Media and meeting apps can lose the audio session. Quit fully, then relaunch.
  • Replug Or Re-pair — Unplug the 3.5 mm jack or USB audio, then reconnect. For Bluetooth, forget and pair again.
  • Try A Different Port Or Cable — Bad USB ports and frayed HDMI/aux leads are common.
  • Test Another App — If Spotify is silent but YouTube plays, it’s an app setting, not the system.
Platform Quick Path 10-Second Fix
Windows Taskbar speaker > output list Select device, raise slider
macOS Control Center > Sound Pick output, unmute
Android/iPhone Volume keys > media stream Turn up media, disable silent

Audio Does Not Work On Windows Or Mac — Start Here

Windows: Core Checks

  • Pick Output In SettingsOutput device: Settings > System > Sound > Choose where to play sound.
  • Run The Troubleshooter — Settings > System > Troubleshoot > Other troubleshooters > Playing Audio.
  • Restart Audio Services — Press Win+R, type services.msc, restart Windows Audio and Windows Audio Endpoint Builder.
  • Disable Exclusive Mode — Control Panel > Sound > your device > Advanced > uncheck “Allow applications to take exclusive control.”
  • Try A Different Format — Same Advanced tab > change default format (e.g., 24-bit/48 kHz), then test.

macOS: Core Checks

  • Select Output In Settings — System Settings > Sound > Output > pick speakers, headphones, or display.
  • Kill The Muted App Session — Quit the app from the dock (right-click > Quit). Reopen and play again.
  • Reset CoreAudio — Open Terminal, run sudo killall coreaudiod (audio restarts instantly).
  • Format And Balance — Audio MIDI Setup > pick device > set Format (44.1/48 kHz) and center the Balance.
  • Turn Off Sound Effects On Output — System Settings > Sound > Sound Effects > play alerts on internal speakers, not your HDMI device.

Audio Not Working On Windows: Fast Fixes

When basic checks pass and sound is still gone, Windows often needs a driver nudge, a format tweak, or a setting change that stops apps from hijacking the stream.

  • Update Or Roll Back The Driver — Device Manager > Sound, video and game controllers > your device > Update. If the issue started after an update, use Roll Back.
  • Switch To High Definition Audio — In Device Manager, Update driver > Browse my computer > Let me pick > choose High Definition Audio Device; test playback.
  • Disable Enhancements — Control Panel > Sound > device > Enhancements tab > check “Disable all enhancements”; apply and test.
  • Match Sample Rate With App — If your DAW or meeting app uses 48 kHz, set the device to 48 kHz to avoid silence or glitches.
  • Turn Off Spatial Audio — Right-click the speaker icon > Spatial sound > Off; this fixes odd routing on some headsets.
  • Fix HDMI/Display Audio — Right-click the speaker icon > Sound settings > pick the TV/monitor. On NVIDIA/AMD control panels, enable audio over HDMI when present.
  • Reset The Audio Stack — In PowerShell (Admin): net stop audiosrv, net stop audioendpointbuilder, then start both again; or reboot.

Tip: If a USB dock shows up twice (speaker and communications device), pick the normal speaker entry for music and video to avoid app-only routes.

No Sound On Phones And Tablets

Android Fixes

  • Raise Media Volume — Press volume keys, tap the down-arrow, raise the Media slider; Ringtone does not drive video or music.
  • Disable Do Not Disturb — Quick Settings > DND tile off; many phones silence media in DND mode.
  • Toggle Bluetooth — Turn Bluetooth off for 10 seconds; this forces playback back to the phone speaker.
  • Change Output In Volume Panel — Tap the output switcher icon; choose phone speaker or the right headset.
  • Clear App Cache — Settings > Apps > select the silent app > Storage > Clear cache, then reopen.

iPhone Fixes

  • Raise Media Slider — In Control Center, drag the volume up; the side switch controls ring, not media on many models.
  • Turn Off Silent/Sound Modes — Toggle the side switch or the Action button profile to a mode that allows sounds.
  • Route Audio To Speaker — During playback, tap the AirPlay icon and choose iPhone; if a car kit or earbuds hold the session, you get silence.
  • Reset Bluetooth Route — Settings > Bluetooth > tap ⓘ > Forget Device, then pair again to refresh profiles.
  • Clean The Speaker Grill — Dust can muffle sound; a soft brush often restores volume.

App Sound Missing In Specific Apps

When sound fails in one app but not others, per-app settings or browser policies usually block the stream. Fix the app, not the system.

Browsers (YouTube, Web Players)

  • Unmute The Tab — Right-click the tab title > Unmute site. Many browsers mute auto-playing tabs.
  • Allow Autoplay — Site settings > Sound/Autoplay > Allow. Some players stay silent until permitted.
  • Pick Output Inside The Player — Some web players have their own device picker and volume slider.
  • Disable Extensions That Grab Audio — Turn off audio recorders or virtual cables; test in a private window.

Video Calls (Teams, Meet, Zoom)

  • Choose Speaker In App — Open the app’s audio settings and select the same output you picked in the OS.
  • Turn Off “Use Separate Audio Device” — Unified routing keeps call audio and system audio in sync.
  • Kill And Rejoin — Leave the call, quit the app, reopen, and rejoin; the session resets.

Games And DAWs

  • Match Sample Rate — Set the project to the device rate (44.1/48 kHz). Mismatches can mute output.
  • Disable Exclusive/ASIO Hold — If a DAW grabs the device exclusively, other apps go silent. Turn it off or close the DAW.
  • Lower Latency Targets — Extreme buffers and exotic modes can break drivers. Return to defaults and retest.

When Hardware Is The Culprit

Software fixes can’t heal a snapped cable or a blown driver. Do a fast sweep of the physical chain and swap one piece at a time until sound returns.

  • Test With Known-Good Headphones — If they play, your speakers may be at fault.
  • Try A Different Cable — Aux, USB, or HDMI leads fail often. A short new cable rules this out.
  • Move To Another Port — USB hubs and front-panel jacks can be flaky. Use a rear port or a direct connection.
  • Bypass The Dock — Plug peripherals straight into the computer to remove dock firmware from the chain.
  • Power-Cycle External Gear — Turn off speakers, soundbars, or DACs for 15 seconds, then power on and re-select the input.
  • Watch For Mono/Balanced Switches — Some speakers have rear switches that mute one side; set to stereo/line.
  • Charge Wireless Headsets — Low battery can connect Bluetooth but drop audio.

Service cue: If tapping the speaker cone crackles or the DAC vanishes from device lists mid-song, plan for repair or replacement.

Less Obvious Settings That Kill Sound

Hidden toggles and power features can silence audio across a whole setup. These take a minute to check and often explain random drop-outs.

  • Power Plans And USB Suspend — On laptops, set a balanced plan and disable USB selective suspend for audio interfaces.
  • Headset Mode Vs. Headphones — Many Bluetooth sets expose two profiles: hands-free (low quality, call-only) and stereo. Pick stereo for media.
  • Per-App Volume Mixer — On Windows, right-click the speaker icon > Volume mixer; raise the slider for the silent app.
  • HDMI-CEC Or TV Speakers — TV menus can force audio to “TV speakers.” Switch to ARC/eARC or the soundbar input.
  • Virtual Audio Cables — Recording tools that create virtual devices can hijack the default route; disable during normal use.
  • Narrow Balance — Slide balance to center if audio plays only on one side.

Keep Sound Stable Next Time

Once you’ve restored playback, lock in a setup that stays quiet only when you want it quiet. Small habits and a few one-time tweaks prevent repeat failures.

  • Pin A Known-Good Default — Set the main speakers or headset as default. Keep a backup device handy in the picker.
  • Update On Your Schedule — Install driver and OS updates after a backup, then test audio right away.
  • Name Your Devices — Rename outputs so you can tell “Monitor HDMI” from “USB DAC” at a glance.
  • Keep Cables Short And Fresh — Replace bent leads. Short runs reduce noise and failure points.
  • Separate Work And Play Profiles — Meeting apps can change settings. Use app-level controls instead of global device switches where possible.
  • Export App Presets — Save EQ and project templates so you can reset after a reinstall in seconds.

When a future session goes silent, retrace the same flow: outputs, volume, app mixer, OS device, then drivers and cables. It takes less than a minute once you’ve practiced it. If audio does not work again after a clean boot, swap hardware pieces one by one to pinpoint the failing link.