A GoPro Hero 8 that won’t power on usually needs a fresh battery reset, correct charger, clean SD card, or a manual firmware update.
Stuck with a silent HERO8 Black? This guide gives fixes that work, from power checks to deep recovery steps.
What To Check First
Before diving deep, rule out the basics. Many “dead” cameras wake up after a power cycle, a charge, or a storage card swap. Work through the quick list below in order. Each step is safe and takes only a minute or two.
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Fix Priority |
|---|---|---|
| No lights, no beeps | Battery seated poorly or drained | Reseat battery, try wall charge 30–45 minutes |
| Red light flickers, then off | Weak USB power or bad cable | Use 5V/2.4A wall adapter and known-good C-to-C cable |
| Boot loop on logo | Card error or corrupt firmware | Remove card; if it boots, reformat and update |
| Turns on only when plugged in | Tired or swollen battery | Test with a fresh GoPro-spec battery |
| Freezes, then won’t wake | Firmware glitch | Battery pull; manual update on a clean card |
When Your Hero 8 Refuses To Power Up (Quick Wins)
Do A True Power Cycle
Pop the battery out. Wait ten seconds. Press and hold the Mode button for ten seconds to clear residual charge. Reinsert the battery and tap Mode once. If the front screen lights, you’re back. If not, continue.
Charge From A Reliable Wall Brick
Feed the camera from a UL-listed 5V, ~2.4A wall adapter, not a laptop port. Use a short USB-C cable that you trust. Leave it on charge for at least half an hour, then tap Mode again. A low-amp source can leave the pack stuck near empty, which looks like a dead unit.
Test With A Known-Good Battery
Packs fatigue over time and in heat. If the camera only wakes on USB or dies under load, swap in a fresh GoPro-spec pack. Check the door closes cleanly and the battery sits flush; loose contact mimics a dead board.
Boot Without The microSD Card
Pull the card and try to power on. If the camera starts, the card is the culprit. Reinsert and use in-camera Format (FAT32/exFAT). Stick with U3, V30 cards from the approved list. Avoid budget lines that throttle writes.
Deep Fixes That Solve Stubborn No-Power Cases
Manual Firmware Refresh
Glitches during previous updates can leave the system in a limbo where it won’t boot. A manual refresh on a blank card restores clean files. Prepare a 32–128 GB card, format it on your computer, copy the official update folder to the root, then start the camera with the card inserted and a charged battery. The camera will apply the package and power cycle. Full steps are in GoPro’s power-on help and the HERO update camera update guide. Place the folder at root, charge past 50%, and avoid USB power while updating.
Clean The Contacts
Inspect the battery tabs and the camera’s spring contacts. If you see smudges or a dull film, wipe gently with a lint-free cloth slightly dampened with isopropyl alcohol. Let everything dry fully, then seat the pack again. Do not scrape the tabs.
Reset Preferences Once It Boots
After a successful start, clear odd behavior by opening Preferences → Reset → Factory Reset. You’ll keep your footage; the menu resets clear lingering toggles that can cause freezes or odd loops.
Why microSD Cards Can Keep A Camera From Powering On
It’s common to blame the battery when the real villain is storage. A slow or failing card can stall the boot sequence. U3/V30 speed, fresh formatting, and trusted brands matter. If removing the card lets the unit start, you’ve found your bottleneck.
Pick Cards That Match HERO8 Recording Modes
This model writes up to 100 Mbps in high-bitrate modes. That needs cards rated for sustained writes, not just burst speed. Cards labeled “U3” or “V30” are the baseline; faster models are fine but won’t heal a faulty sample.
Signs Your Card Is The Problem
- Camera logo appears, then loops or shuts off.
- Unit powers on only with the card removed.
- Random “SD ERR” messages before the last shutdown.
Safe Charging Habits That Prevent No-Power Scares
Use The Right Power Source
Stick to steady 5V wall power. Many PC ports sag under load, which can lock the camera mid-boot or during an update. After wet adventures, make sure the port is fully dry before charging.
Mind Battery Health
Heat and storage at full charge shorten pack life. Store packs around mid-charge, avoid hot cars, and retire any cell that looks puffy or smells odd. A swollen pack can lose contact or press on the door, leading to surprise shutdowns.
Step-By-Step Recovery Flow
Work through these steps in sequence. Stop once the camera stays on and records reliably.
- Remove the card and battery. Wait ten seconds.
- Hold Mode for ten seconds. Reinsert the battery.
- Charge on a 5V/2.4A wall adapter for 30–45 minutes.
- Try to power on without the card.
- If it boots, format the card in-camera and test. If not, fetch a known-good U3/V30 card.
- Apply a manual firmware refresh on a blank card.
- Once stable, reset Preferences and set your modes again.
Recommended Settings After You Recover Power
Keep It Simple For First Boot
Leave Protune off at first, use 1080p/30 Standard bitrate, and turn on Quick Capture. Record a one-minute clip to verify stable writes, then step up to your usual modes.
Update With A Clean Card
When new software drops, update on a freshly formatted card with only the update folder present. Avoid stacked files or mixed folders from old updates.
Charger And Cable Checklist
| Item | What To Look For | Pass/Fail Cue |
|---|---|---|
| Wall Adapter | 5V output, ~2.4A rating, safety marks | Red light goes steady; no cycling |
| USB-C Cable | Short, intact ends; no wobble | Charges phone reliably |
| Battery Fit | Flat top, no puffing; firm latch | Door closes flush; no play |
| Port Cleanliness | No moisture or lint | Firm click when cable seats |
When To Suspect Hardware Damage
If none of the steps revive the unit, think about recent knocks, saltwater splashes with the door open, or third-party cages that forced the door. Liquid ingress or board cracks can leave the power rail unstable. At that point, testing with another pack and a blank card helps confirm the fault.
What A Service Agent Will Ask
- Exact steps you tried and in what order.
- Battery age and how many cycles it has.
- Card make, model, and size.
- Software version, if you can reach the menus.
Preventive Habits That Keep HERO8 Reliable
Format In Camera
Use the camera’s own Format command before big shoots. That sets the file system the way the firmware expects.
Watch The Battery Icon
Shut down and swap cells before the icon hits red during hot days or 4K recording. Brown-outs near empty can look like random freezes.
Keep The Port And Doors Clean
Flush with fresh water after salt conditions, dry fully, and check the door seals. Good seals keep corrosion off contacts and boards.
Helpful Official Resources
For detailed model steps and the latest files, see the official power-on help page and the camera update guide. Linking those references here keeps this guide tight and lets you grab the exact files you need.
Wrap-Up: Get Back To Recording
A silent action cam is frustrating, yet most cases come down to a loose contact, a weak pack, or a cranky card. Work the checklist, refresh the software on a clean card, and test with a steady wall charge. In a pinch, boot with no card, then add parts back one at a time until the fault appears. That simple split-half method finds the cause fast.
