iPad Pro charging usually fails due to power, cable, port, heat, or software—fix each in order to restore charging.
iPad Pro Not Charging — Quick Checks
Most charge failures trace back to four spots: the wall adapter, the cable, the port, or the system. Start fast, then go deeper. This path saves time and parts.
| Symptom | Likely Cause | What To Try |
|---|---|---|
| Plug icon shows, no bolt | Low-power source or hub | Use a wall adapter rated 20 W or higher and plug straight into the outlet |
| “Not Charging” next to battery | Under-powered adapter or busy USB hub | Bypass hubs and docks; test a known good 20–30 W brick |
| Cable feels loose or pops out | Lint in port or worn plug | Power down and clean the USB-C port; try a fresh cable |
| Charges only at certain angles | Damaged port | Stop wiggling; book service |
| Charging On Hold alert | Device too hot or too cold | Let it rest at room temp; remove case while cooling |
| Stops rising past ~80% | Thermal pause during long plug-in sessions | Let the tablet cool or unplug and replug later |
Read The Battery Icons
The plug icon means external power is present. The bolt shows current is flowing. When the text near the battery reads “Not Charging,” the adapter may be weak, a hub is sharing power, or a laptop port can’t supply enough.
Rule Out The Wall And Power Strip
Try a different outlet. Skip power bars for this test. Many adapters throttle when stacked on crowded strips. Go straight to the wall so you know the feed is clean.
Swap The Cable The Smart Way
USB-C cables vary. Some are data-only. Some handle 3 A or 5 A. A split sheath, bent strain relief, or a wobbly plug can stop power. Try a cable that you already used to fill another device from the same brick. If your tablet is an older model with Lightning, use an Apple-made or certified C-to-Lightning lead and test again.
Clean The USB-C Port Safely
Pocket lint loves that tiny cavity. Power down first. Use a wooden or plastic toothpick. Tease out fibers from the center seam and the edges. Don’t blast liquids. Don’t jam metal. When you’re done, seat the plug fully—you should feel a soft click.
Know The Right Charger And Cable
Modern tablets charge best with a 20 W USB-C adapter or larger. Bigger bricks can shorten the wait, and the device won’t overdraw; USB Power Delivery handles the handshake. If you pick a third-party charger, make sure it speaks USB-PD and has headroom for any hubs or drives you attach.
Want Apple’s own guidance on adapters and USB-C charging? See charge with the USB-C port and USB power adapter details.
Avoid Weak Sources
Laptop USB ports, TVs, and many hubs feed small current. You may see the plug icon without the bolt. That means the tablet is sipping but not gaining. Test with a wall adapter first, then add accessories back one by one.
Force A Restart
A restart can clear a power controller glitch. Press and quickly release Volume Up, press and quickly release Volume Down, then hold the Top button until the logo appears. Keep holding until the screen goes dark and the logo returns.
Check Temperature
Charging pauses when the device is too hot or too cold. If a Charging On Hold banner appears, move it out of sun or away from a car dash. Let it rest at room temp, then plug in again. Apple documents the alert and ways to resume charging.
Update iPadOS And Apps
Bug fixes can restore normal charging. Connect to Wi-Fi and install the latest iPadOS build. Heavy apps can offset charging while the screen is on; update those and test with the screen off for a few minutes.
Test Without Hubs And Keyboards
Hubs, docks, card readers, and keyboards draw power. Disconnect everything. Plug the adapter straight into the tablet. If charging returns, add gear back until the drain shows up.
When You Use The Smart Connector
Some accessories feed power through the Smart Connector. If a keyboard stopped passing power, detach it and try USB-C. Wipe the three pins with a dry, lint-free cloth and check for debris.
Pick The Right Wattage
Here’s a simple map for common adapters. Your device will take what it needs; the adapter’s top rating is the ceiling, not a push.
| Adapter Rating | What To Expect | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| 12 W–15 W | Slow rise or “Not Charging” during use | Overnight trickle or idle tablet |
| 20 W–30 W | Normal fill, even while browsing | Everyday wall charging |
| 35 W–60 W | Faster top-ups; safe by USB-PD | Short sessions and shared hubs |
Battery Health, Fast Charging, And Myths
High-watt chargers don’t harm the tablet. USB-PD sets voltage and current for each step, then tapers near full. Heat is the real enemy. Charge in a cool spot, take covers off during long sessions, and don’t bury the device under pillows while plugged in.
During long plug-in sessions, the system may pause around 80% to manage heat. That pause can clear once the device cools or you unplug and reconnect. If you need every percent for a flight, let it cool first, then finish the fill.
Fixes For Specific Setups
USB-C Hub Or Dock Attached
Many hubs pass only a slice of the power they receive. If a 20 W brick feeds a hub, the hub keeps a share and your tablet gets the rest. Use a higher-rated adapter, or plug power straight into the tablet and run the hub on its own brick.
External Display Connected
Displays can draw power through the same hub chain. If charge stalls while mirroring, test without the screen. Move to a 35 W or 60 W adapter when driving a display plus storage.
Car Chargers
Many older car adapters don’t speak USB-PD. You may see the plug icon but no bolt. Pick a unit that lists USB-PD and 20 W or more on the label.
Software Steps That Help
Reset Settings
If charging still misbehaves, open Settings and reset all settings. Your data stays. You’ll rejoin Wi-Fi and tweak prefs again, but power rules often clear.
DFU Restore (Last Resort)
When nothing else helps and hardware checks out, a full restore can clear deep glitches. Back up first. Then restore with Finder or iTunes on a Mac or PC and set up again. Test charging before you load every app back.
Clean Power Habits That Save Time
- Use short, quality USB-C cables, 1–2 m long
- Leave hubs and drives on their own bricks when possible
- Keep adapters on open shelves; heat shortens life
- Travel with a spare cable; they fail more often than bricks
- Label your known good pair with tape so you can retest fast
When It’s Time For Service
Charging only works when you bend the plug. The cable won’t seat fully. The port looks twisted. Power cuts in and out with every bump. The tablet won’t fill even with a fresh 20 W or larger brick and a new cable that works fine on another device. Those are hardware flags. Don’t keep forcing the plug—book a visit.
What To Tell The Technician
Bring a short log: which adapters and cables you tried, whether the bolt icon appears, any alerts you saw, the steps you took, and whether charge holds steady once it starts. That saves time and points straight to the fault.
Match The Port And Cable
Every iPad Pro from 2018 onward uses USB-C on the tablet. If you’re holding an older Pro with Lightning, a C-to-Lightning cable is required for modern bricks. A C-to-C cable won’t fit. Check the port: oval = USB-C, small rectangle with a notch = Lightning.
Step-By-Step Troubleshooting Path
- Plug a 20 W or higher adapter straight into a wall outlet.
- Use a short USB-C cable rated for 3 A or 5 A. Swap to a second cable if the first fails.
- Remove the case and let the tablet cool for ten minutes, then try again.
- Power down and clean the port with a wooden pick, then reseat the plug.
- Restart using the button sequence listed above.
- Update iPadOS and retry with the screen off for five minutes.
- Disconnect hubs, keyboards, displays, and storage. Charge from the brick alone.
- Try a higher-rated adapter, such as 30 W or 35 W, if you run a hub or external screen.
- Test the brick and cable on another device. If that device fills, the tablet may need a port repair.
Helpful Apple Pages For Reference
If you want official guidance on the basics, read if your tablet won’t charge and how to charge with USB-C. Both outline adapters, cables, and the temperature alert that can pause charging.
