How to Speed Up Your PC: 10 Easy Steps for Windows Users

If your PC feels slow or sluggish, you don’t always need a new machine—often, a few smart tweaks are enough to speed up your PC again. With a few simple steps for Windows 10 and 11, you can reduce lag, improve boot time, and make everyday tasks feel much smoother.

Below are 10 easy steps to help you speed up your PC and keep it running well for years.


1. Switch to a high‑performance power plan

One of the easiest ways to speed up your PC is to switch from a power‑saving plan to High performance or Best performance. This lets your CPU and GPU run closer to full speed instead of running at a permanent low‑power setting.

  • Go to Settings → System → Power & battery (Windows 11) or Control Panel → Power Options (Windows 10).
  • Choose High performance or Best performance and keep it unless you’re on low battery.

2. Limit startup programs to speed up your PC

Too many apps launching at startup can turn a quick boot into a long wait and slow down your PC after login. By disabling unnecessary startup programs, you free up RAM and CPU for the apps you actually use.

  • Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager.
  • Go to Startup and disable apps you don’t need right when Windows starts.

3. Clean up disk space and junk files

A nearly full hard drive can noticeably slow down your PC, especially if you’re using an older HDD. Clearing temp files, old downloads, and useless data helps Windows manage files more efficiently and can speed up your PC over time.

  • Open Settings → System → Storage and run Storage Sense.
  • Use Disk Cleanup from the Start menu to remove temp files, old updates, and recycle bin clutter.

4. Optimize your drive for better performance

For traditional hard drives, optimizing (defragging) can shorten data‑access times and speed up your PC. For SSDs, Windows uses TRIM automatically, but checking that optimization is enabled reassures you your drive is healthy.

  • Search for “Defragment and Optimize Drives” and click Optimize on each drive.
  • For SSDs, let Windows run optimizations automatically; defragmenting is not needed.

5. Turn off unnecessary visual effects

Fancy animations, shadows, and transparency can make Windows look nice but they can slow down your PC on older hardware. Turning off some visual effects reduces GPU and CPU load, making windows and menus feel snappier.

  • Search for “Performance Information and Tools” → Adjust visual effects.
  • Choose Adjust for best performance or manually disable animations, shadows, and transparency.

6. Update Windows and drivers

Outdated drivers—especially graphics and chipset—can cause lag, stutter, or crashes that make your PC feel slow. Keeping Windows and drivers up to date improves stability, performance, and security, helping you speed up your PC automatically.

  • Go to Settings → Windows Update and install all pending updates.
  • Update key drivers (GPU, chipset, Wi‑Fi) from your PC maker’s website or via Device Manager.

7. Reduce background apps and services

Many apps run in the background even when you’re not using them, consuming memory and CPU. Cutting back on these lets more resources go to programs you actually care about and can speed up your PC during heavy workloads.

  • Go to Settings → Apps → Background apps and turn off background activity for apps you don’t need.
  • Use Task Manager → Processes to spot resource‑hungry apps and close or uninstall them.

8. Upgrade RAM or switch to an SSD

If your PC is still slow after tweaking settings, the issue may be hardware. Upgrading from 4 GB to 8 GB or 16 GB RAM or replacing an old HDD with an SSD can dramatically speed up your PC, especially for boot times and everyday responsiveness.

  • Check RAM usage in Task Manager → Performance.
  • If memory is consistently near full, consider more RAM or an SSD for a major performance boost.

9. Restart your PC regularly

A simple restart can speed up your PC by clearing out filled‑up RAM, killing stuck processes, and reloading Windows cleanly. If you leave your PC running for days or weeks, performance can gradually drop.

  • Restart your PC at least once a week, especially if you notice slowdowns.
  • Avoid relying only on sleep mode for long periods.

10. Uninstall unused software and toolbars

Extra programs, trialware, and rarely used tools clutter your system and can slow down your PC by auto‑starting or running background services. Removing unnecessary apps frees up disk space and reduces background load.

  • Go to Settings → Apps → Installed apps and uninstall what you don’t use.
  • Skip third‑party “registry cleaners” and stick to Windows‑built tools to keep your PC safe while speeding it up.

When should you upgrade hardware?

For older PCs (8+ years, HDD, 4 GB RAM), software tweaks have limits. If you still feel major lag after trying these steps, investing in more RAM, an SSD, or a newer PC will give the best long‑term improvement and truly speed up your PC experience.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *