Repaste a desktop CPU every 3–5 years, or sooner if load temperatures rise after cleaning.
CPU paste does not have a calendar alarm. A good paste job can run for years, while a poor mount can cause bad temperatures on day one. The best answer is to track heat, noise, and cooler contact, not just time.
For most desktop PCs, repasting every three to five years is a sane rhythm. Gaming rigs, hot rooms, compact cases, and laptops may need work sooner. Office desktops with clean airflow may go longer with no issue.
Why CPU Paste Ages
Thermal paste fills tiny pits between the CPU heat spreader and the cooler base. Metal looks flat, but it has small gaps. Paste pushes air out of those gaps, so heat can move into the cooler with less resistance.
Over time, heat cycles can dry paste, squeeze it toward the edges, or leave a thinner layer under the cooler. Dust can also trap heat and make paste look guilty when the real fix is cleaning the fins and fans. That is why temperature testing matters before you pull the cooler off.
How Often to Repaste CPU? Signs That Tell You
Repaste the CPU when you have clear signs, not just because a forum comment says it is time. The strongest sign is a rise in load temperature under the same room temp, fan curve, and workload.
A desktop CPU that used to sit at 70°C during a render and now hits 82°C after dust cleaning deserves a closer check. If the cooler is mounted well and the fans work, paste may be the weak point.
Repaste Soon If You See These Clues
- Load temperatures rise by 8–10°C with the same settings.
- Fans ramp harder than they used to during the same tasks.
- The CPU throttles under work it once handled well.
- You removed the cooler for any reason.
- The paste looks dry, cracked, chalky, or patchy.
When a cooler comes off, old paste should not be reused. Intel’s thermal paste application page explains that paste is part of the cooling interface between the processor and cooler. Once that seal breaks, fresh paste gives the cooler a clean mating surface.
Normal Repaste Timing By PC Type
The right interval depends on heat load, cooler pressure, paste type, and case airflow. A quiet office PC and a small gaming laptop do not age paste the same way. Use the table as a working range, then let temperatures decide.
| PC Or Use Case | Typical Repaste Range | What Changes The Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Office desktop | 4–6 years | Light load, lower heat, cleaner fan curves |
| Gaming desktop | 3–5 years | Long gaming sessions, stronger heat cycles |
| Workstation | 2–4 years | Rendering, compiling, encoding, long 100% loads |
| Small form factor PC | 2–3 years | Tight airflow and higher internal heat |
| Gaming laptop | 1–3 years | Shared heat pipes, dust buildup, pump-out risk |
| Mini PC | 2–4 years | Small cooler, low paste volume, fan dust |
| Overclocked desktop | 1–3 years | Higher voltage, heat spikes, mount pressure |
| Fresh custom build | Test after 1 month | Early mount error, uneven spread, loose screws |
High-grade paste can last longer than many people think. Noctua states on its NT-H2 product page that the compound can be used on a CPU for five years or more. That does not mean every paste lasts that long, but it shows why a yearly repaste is often wasted work on a healthy desktop.
Check Temperatures Before You Repaste
Start with a baseline. Clean the dust filters, heatsink fins, and fan blades. Then run the same workload for 10–15 minutes and write down room temp, CPU package temp, fan speed, and CPU wattage.
Use the same test next month or after a season change. A small swing is normal. A steady climb under the same load tells you something changed.
What A Bad Paste Job Looks Like
Bad paste often acts like poor contact. Idle temps may look fine, then load temps jump hard within seconds. One or two cores may run hotter than the rest. The fan may race, slow down, then race again.
If you repasted last week and temps got worse, do not add more paste on top. Remove the cooler, clean both surfaces, apply a fresh dot or pattern suited to the CPU shape, and mount the cooler evenly.
Repaste Or Clean: Which Fix Comes First?
Dust removal should happen before paste work. A clogged heatsink can raise temperatures more than old paste. Cleaning is also safer, since you do not need to disturb the cooler mount.
| Symptom | Try First | Repaste If |
|---|---|---|
| Fans are louder at idle | Clean fans and check background tasks | Idle temp stays much higher after cleaning |
| CPU throttles under load | Check dust, fan speed, and cooler mount | Load temp remains high with full fan speed |
| Temps rose after moving the PC | Check cooler screws and cable snags | Cooler pressure looks uneven |
| Cooler was removed | Clean old paste from both surfaces | Always apply fresh paste before mounting |
| New paste performs poorly | Check amount and mounting pattern | Spread is bare in spots or squeezed to one side |
Paste choice also changes the service window. ARCTIC says MX-6 has non-drying and non-bleeding properties on its MX-6 thermal paste page. Thick pastes may resist pump-out better in some laptops, while thinner pastes can be easier to spread on desktop chips.
How To Repaste Without Making Heat Worse
Power down, unplug the PC, and let the cooler reach room temp. Twist the cooler slightly before lifting so dried paste does not pull the CPU upward. Clean the CPU lid and cooler base with a lint-free wipe and high-percentage isopropyl alcohol.
Use a pea-size dot for many desktop CPUs, or the pattern suggested by the cooler or paste maker. Too little leaves dry spots. Too much can spill over the edges and make cleanup annoying, even when the paste is non-conductive.
Mounting Matters More Than The Brand
Tighten screws in a cross pattern, a few turns at a time. Uneven pressure can ruin a good paste layer. Plug the fan or pump back into the right header before booting.
After the first boot, check idle temp, then run a load test. Do not panic over a brief spike. Modern CPUs boost hard for short bursts. What matters is the steady load temperature, fan behavior, and whether clocks stay stable.
A Good Rule For Most Builders
For a desktop, plan on repasting every three to five years, but test before acting. For laptops and compact PCs, one to three years is more realistic if heat and fan noise rise. Any time the cooler comes off, clean the old layer and apply fresh paste.
The best repaste schedule is boring: clean dust twice a year, log one repeatable load test, and replace paste only when the evidence points there. That keeps the CPU cool without turning normal maintenance into busywork.
References & Sources
- Intel.“How to Apply Thermal Paste and How It Works.”Explains thermal paste use between the processor and cooler.
- Noctua.“NT-H2 10g: Features.”States long-term CPU use and storage claims for NT-H2 paste.
- ARCTIC.“MX-6 Thermal Paste.”Describes MX-6 consistency, application traits, and non-drying behavior.
