A black display often traces to power, cables, sleep settings, or graphics drivers; reset the device, test one change, and watch what brings the picture back.
A screen that drops to black can feel like the device quit. Most of the time, it hasn’t. The trick is sorting three cases: the computer is off, the computer is on but the display path fails, or the display is on but you can’t see it (brightness, input, backlight).
You’ll start with checks that take minutes, then move into driver and system fixes, and finish with signs that point to hardware trouble.
What A Black Screen Usually Means
“Black screen” can mean different things. Match your symptom to the right fix.
- Black screen with power light off: power or startup failure.
- Black screen with fans running or keyboard lit: the system may be running while video output fails.
- Black screen after sleep: wake or graphics handoff issues.
- Black screen only in one app or game: display mode, overlays, or GPU load.
- Black screen with a cursor: the desktop shell or graphics stack is stuck.
First Checks Before You Change Settings
Start here so you don’t waste time on software when the problem is a loose connection.
Do A Full Power Reset
Shut down, unplug power, wait 20 seconds, then start again. On a desktop, flip the PSU switch off (if present) during the wait.
Confirm Brightness And Display Input
On a laptop, tap the brightness-up button a few times. On an external monitor, use the monitor buttons to confirm the input source matches your cable.
Swap Cable, Port, And Dock
Try a known-good cable, then a different port. If you use a dock, bypass it and connect the display straight to the machine.
Disconnect Extras
Unplug USB hubs, external drives, capture cards, and second monitors. A bad accessory or adapter can break startup or video output.
Why Is My Screen Going Black? On Windows And Mac
Narrow the cause by timing: during startup, right after login, or mid-session. Each pattern points to a smaller set of fixes.
If The Screen Goes Black During Startup
If you see a logo, then it turns black, suspect GPU handoff, display output selection, or firmware settings. If you never see a logo, suspect power, RAM, storage, or the panel itself.
- Test an external display: if it shows the image, the system is running and the built-in panel path becomes the main suspect.
- Listen for cues: fan spin, keyboard lights, and notification sounds hint the system is alive.
- Force a clean boot: hold the power button until it shuts off, then start again.
If The Screen Goes Black After Login
This often points to the desktop shell, a driver crash, or a display mode mismatch.
If The Screen Goes Black While You’re Working
This pattern ties to heat, power limits, a failing cable, or sleep timers that kick in while you’re paused.
Screen Goes Black Randomly: The Most Common Causes
Once cables and inputs are ruled out, these causes show up again and again.
Sleep, Lid, And Power Plan Triggers
Displays can turn off while the computer stays awake. On laptops, a lid sensor can misfire. On desktops, a short display timeout can look like a crash.
Graphics Driver Crashes Or Rough Updates
If the screen drops to black and returns, or comes back after a restart, the graphics driver is a strong suspect. Updates can change how refresh rate, HDR, and multi-monitor setups switch modes.
Heat Or Power Delivery Problems
Heat can push a GPU or CPU into protective throttling, then a reset. A weak charger, worn battery, or under-rated power supply can also cut out under load.
Backlight Or Internal Cable Fault
On laptops, hinges stress display cables over time. A failing backlight can make the panel look black even while the image is faintly present. Shine a phone flashlight at an angle; if you see a dim desktop, the backlight path is the problem.
App Fullscreen And Overlay Conflicts
If it happens in one app, switch to windowed or borderless mode and turn off overlays, capture tools, and HDR toggles for a test run.
| What You See | Likely Cause | First Move |
|---|---|---|
| Black screen, PC seems on, no cursor | Display input/cable, GPU output selection | Swap cable, change monitor input, test another port |
| Black screen with cursor | Desktop shell not loading, driver hang | Try Task Manager / restart Explorer, then reboot |
| Black after sleep, returns after hard reboot | Wake sequence or graphics handoff | Turn off Fast Startup, tune sleep timers |
| Black only during games | Mode switch, GPU load, overheating | Use borderless/windowed, watch temps, cap FPS |
| External monitor works, laptop panel black | Panel, backlight, internal display cable | Flashlight test, then service check |
| Black at boot, no logo, power light on | RAM seating, storage, firmware, GPU issue | Disconnect extras, try recovery boot |
| Black screen flickers, then returns | Driver reset, unstable cable, refresh-rate mismatch | Lower refresh rate, replace cable, reinstall driver |
| Black screen on one monitor only | Monitor, port, or dock issue | Test the monitor on another device, bypass the dock |
Fix Order That Avoids Guesswork
Work through these steps in order. After each change, test long enough to see whether the black screen returns.
Step 1: Try A Display Driver Reset Shortcut
On Windows, press Windows + Ctrl + Shift + B. If the driver is stuck, the screen may flash and come back.
Step 2: Boot With A Minimal Setup
Unplug everything except power and a single display. If you use a desktop GPU, connect the monitor to the GPU port, not the motherboard port.
Step 3: Use Safe Mode To Rule Out Drivers
If the black screen blocks normal use, Safe Mode is a clean test. Microsoft lists recovery and Safe Mode paths on its Troubleshooting blank screens in Windows page.
If the screen stays on in Safe Mode, a display driver or startup app is a common culprit.
Step 4: Roll Back Or Reinstall The Graphics Driver
If the issue started right after a driver update, roll back. If it started after an OS update, try a clean reinstall of the GPU driver package.
Step 5: Check Refresh Rate And HDR
Drop refresh rate to a standard value (60 Hz is a stable test) and turn HDR off for a day. If the black screen stops, turn features back on one by one.
Step 6: Watch Heat And Power Under Load
If blackouts hit during heavy tasks, watch temperatures and test with a different charger or power outlet. On desktops, sudden blackouts under GPU load can point to a power supply issue.
Step 7: Repair Windows System Files
If the desktop loads, then turns black after a minute, system file damage can be part of it. Run System File Checker and DISM from an admin terminal, then reboot and re-test.
Mac Checks For A Black Screen
On a Mac laptop, black screen issues often tie to power, sleep, or external displays. Apple’s Mac Help page on If your Mac screen goes black covers steps like charging, unplugging devices, and restarting.
Confirm Battery And Charger
If the screen goes black and the trackpad still clicks, plug in power and let it charge for a bit. Low battery can blank the display before the system fully sleeps.
Reset The External Display Chain
If you use an external display, unplug it, restart the Mac, then reconnect. Also try a different cable or adapter, since USB-C adapters can fail in ways that look like a system problem.
Check Login Items After A Safe Boot Test
If the screen goes black right after login, startup items can be the trigger. If Safe Boot stays stable, remove recent login items and third-party display tools, then test again.
| Where It Fails | What To Test | What A Pass Means |
|---|---|---|
| Before any logo appears | Power adapter, outlet, external display | Power path or display chain issue |
| After logo or progress bar | Safe Mode / recovery boot | Software stack may be involved |
| After login | Login items, display tools, external monitor | One app or setting may trigger it |
| Only on external display | Cable, adapter, monitor input | Adapter or monitor chain issue |
| Only on built-in display | Flashlight test, hinge angle test | Panel, backlight, or internal cable |
| Only under heavy load | Heat, charger wattage, vents | Thermal or power limit behavior |
| Random blackouts, then return | Refresh rate, cables, docks | Signal path instability |
When The Black Screen Points To Hardware
These signs lean toward a physical fault.
- External monitor works, built-in panel stays dark: panel, backlight, or internal cable.
- Screen reacts to hinge angle: cable wear near the hinge.
- Artifacts before the screen turns black: blocky pixels, strange colors, or flicker can point to GPU or VRAM trouble.
- Burnt smell or hot spot: stop using it and get it checked.
What To Bring To A Repair Shop
Bring a short log: when it happens, what you were doing, whether an external monitor works, and whether Safe Mode changes anything.
Keeping It From Coming Back
- Replace any cable that felt loose or caused flicker.
- Keep GPU drivers on a steady release track, not constant beta builds.
- Clean dust from vents and fans based on your room and pet hair.
- If a dock caused trouble, update its firmware and stick to certified cables.
- After major OS updates, re-check refresh rate, HDR, and sleep timers.
References & Sources
- Microsoft.“Troubleshooting blank screens in Windows.”Checklist for cables, recovery, Safe Mode, and driver checks when Windows shows a blank or black screen.
- Apple.“If your Mac screen goes black.”Steps for charging, unplugging devices, and restarting when a Mac display turns black.
