Troubleshooting and Fixes

How to Fix Overheating on a Windows Laptop: Complete Guide (Latest)

How to Fix Overheating on a Windows Laptop
How to Fix Overheating on a Windows Laptop: Complete Guide (2026) | Tech Convenience Store Kenya
Laptop Troubleshooting · Kenya · 2026

How to Fix Overheatingon a Windows Laptop

Fans spinning at full blast, laptop hot to the touch, random shutdowns? This complete guide diagnoses every cause and walks you through every fix — in order, from easiest to most advanced.

✅ Below 70°C — Normal ⚠️ 70–85°C — Watch It 🔥 Above 90°C — Fix Now
📖 15 min read · 🇰🇪 Kenya Localised · Windows 10 & 11 · Updated May 2026
Below 50°C Excellent Idle / light tasks. Normal.
50–70°C Normal General workloads. Fine.
70–85°C Warm Heavy tasks. Monitor closely.
Above 90°C Danger Sustained = hardware damage.

A laptop that runs too hot is not just uncomfortable to use — it is actively shortening the lifespan of every component inside it. The fix is rarely expensive. The cost of ignoring it always is.

PCWorld's 2026 overheating guide is direct: "There are many telltale signs your laptop is overheating. You might notice excess fan noise, system crashes, spontaneous resets, or just the physical signs of overheating like an underside that's hot to the touch. But no matter the signs, a hot laptop is a drag, causing your PC to not function as efficiently." Beyond comfort, LaptopBRO confirms: "Continuous overheating can reduce battery life, slow performance, damage internal components, and shorten the laptop's overall lifespan."

For Kenyan laptop users, overheating is a heightened risk. Nairobi's ambient temperature — typically 18–28°C year-round — means your laptop's cooling system already starts from a higher baseline than machines in cooler markets. Combine that with the dust from Nairobi's CBD streets, the habit of using laptops on beds and sofas, and older refurbished machines whose fans may not have been serviced since arriving from the UK — and overheating becomes a genuinely common problem that deserves a genuinely complete solution.

This guide covers every cause and every fix, ordered from the simplest to the most advanced. Work through them in sequence — most overheating problems are resolved at the early, free steps before any hardware intervention is needed.


Section 01

The 6 Main Causes of Laptop Overheating

LaptopBRO's comprehensive overheating guide identifies the root causes clearly: "Your laptop may overheat due to clogged air vents, heavy background programs, dust buildup, weak thermal paste, blocked airflow, or overloading the CPU/GPU. Identifying the cause early helps prevent long-term damage." Understanding the cause directs you to the right fix — and saves you the time of applying fixes that won't work for your specific situation.

🌬️
Cause #1 · Most Common
Blocked or Dusty Vents
Dust accumulates inside vents and on the cooling fan, blocking airflow. Dell confirms: "Lint and dust accumulation prevents the air from flowing around the cooling fins and causes the fan to work harder." The number one cause globally.
🇰🇪 Nairobi's dust-heavy environment accelerates accumulation — vents that clog in 12 months in the UK clog in 6 months here.
🛋️
Cause #2 · Very Common
Soft Surface Usage
Tweaktown explains: "Soft surfaces can block the ventilation grills — usually located underneath the laptop — restricting airflow. When heat can't escape properly, it builds up inside, raising temperatures and forcing the fans to work harder." Beds, sofas, and laps are the main culprits.
🇰🇪 The most common Kenyan home usage habit — working on a bed — is also the fastest way to overheat a laptop.
Cause #3 · Common
Heavy Background Processes
Background apps — antivirus scans, Windows Update downloads, crypto miners hidden in malware, or too many browser tabs — push the CPU to high utilisation without any visible reason. A CPU running at 80–100% produces far more heat than one at 20–30%.
🇰🇪 Malware running cryptomining processes in the background is a documented cause of mysterious overheating for Kenyan laptop users — particularly on machines with outdated antivirus.
🧱
Cause #4
Dried or Missing Thermal Paste
PCWorld recommends replacing thermal paste every 3–4 years. Thermal paste is the compound between your CPU/GPU and the heatsink — it transfers heat efficiently when fresh but dries out over time, dramatically reducing cooling effectiveness.
🇰🇪 EX-UK refurbished laptops 3–5 years old often have dried thermal paste that was never replaced. A common and overlooked cause on older refurbished machines.
🌡️
Cause #5
High Ambient Temperature
Laptops are engineered for a standard operating environment of 15–35°C. Using a laptop in a room above 30°C — a hot Nairobi afternoon without air conditioning — means the cooling system works harder to achieve the same result, and temperatures run consistently higher.
🇰🇪 Kenya's warm climate is a genuine contributing factor that most global guides do not account for. Working near a window in afternoon sun compounds this significantly.
🔄
Cause #6
Failing or Slow Cooling Fan
LaptopBRO identifies this: "Your laptop's fan is the only active cooling component inside. If it becomes weak, noisy, or doesn't spin properly, temperatures shoot up quickly." A fan that rattles, grinds, or does not spin at all is a serious cooling failure requiring hardware intervention.

Section 02

Step Zero: Monitor Your Temperatures Before You Fix Anything

Before applying any fix, establish a baseline — what temperature is your laptop actually running at? BBit Digital recommends: "Download HWMonitor or Core Temp to track CPU and GPU temperatures. If they exceed 85°C, you may have a cooling issue." Knowing your starting temperature tells you whether the fixes you apply are actually working — and how urgently you need to act.

Temperature State CPU Usage Context What to Do
Below 50°C✅ ExcellentIdle / web browsingNothing — your cooling is working perfectly.
50–70°C✅ NormalProductivity, office appsNormal operation. Monitor occasionally.
70–85°C⚠️ WarmVideo, light gamingAcceptable under load. Watch for sustained periods above 80°C.
85–90°C🔶 HotAny workloadApply Fixes 1–4 immediately. Clean vents, check placement.
Above 90°C🔴 CriticalAny workloadStop intensive tasks. Apply all fixes. Hardware intervention likely needed.
Above 95°C🔴 Thermal ThrottleAny workloadCPU auto-reduces speed to protect itself. Performance tanks. Urgent hardware fix needed.
🌡️ Free Temperature Monitoring Tools

HWiNFO (hwinfo.com/en/download/) — most comprehensive, shows all sensor data in real time · Core Temp (alcpu.com/CoreTemp/) — simple, shows per-core CPU temperature · GPU-Z (techpowerup.com/gpuz/) — dedicated GPU temperature monitoring. All are free, lightweight, and run without installation on some versions. Download one, run it in the background, and stress your laptop for 10 minutes to see peak temperatures before applying fixes.


Section 03

The 8 Fixes — From Easiest to Most Advanced

🟢
Group 01 · Do These First · Free & Immediate
Quick Wins — No Tools Required
01
Immediate Fix · 0 cost · 10 seconds

Always Use Your Laptop on a Hard, Flat Surface

Easy

Tweaktown's March 2026 guide opens with this as the most important behavioural fix: "Do you often use your laptop on soft surfaces, such as beds, couches, or pillows? If so, that could be a major reason it's overheating." Most laptop air vents are on the bottom — a soft surface blocks them entirely, trapping heat that should be escaping into the room.

The fix is instantaneous and costs nothing: move your laptop to a hard, flat surface. A desk, a table, a hard floor, a book — anything rigid that does not conform to the shape of the laptop's base. You will often hear the fan slow down within seconds of making this change as the blocked hot air finally escapes.

Move the laptop to a hard, flat surface immediately — desk, table, or wooden floor.
Ensure all four rubber feet on the laptop's base are present and intact — they create the air gap between the laptop and the surface. Missing feet reduce that gap significantly.
If you frequently work from a bed or sofa, invest in a laptop stand or lap desk (KSh 800–2,000 in Nairobi) — a rigid platform that maintains the air gap regardless of the surface you rest it on.
🇰🇪 Kenya context: Working from bed is ubiquitous among students and WFH professionals in Nairobi. If this is your setup, a laptop stand is not optional — it is the single most impactful KSh 1,000 you can spend on your laptop's longevity.
02
Software Fix · 0 cost · 2 minutes

Close Heavy Background Processes via Task Manager

Easy

Dell's official overheating guide states: "Change which applications run when Windows starts by using the Startup tab in Task Manager. Close applications when you are not using them." Every open application — especially browsers with many tabs, video editors, antivirus scans, and game launchers — places load on the CPU and GPU, generating heat. Closing what you are not actively using immediately reduces that load.

Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager. Go to the Processes tab.
Click the CPU column header to sort by CPU usage, highest first. Look for any process consuming more than 20–30% CPU unexpectedly.
Right-click any suspicious or unnecessary high-CPU process → End Task. Do not end Windows system processes (svchost, System, Registry).
Go to the Startup tab — disable any apps you do not need launching at startup. Fewer startup apps = faster boot + less background load = lower idle temperature.
Close unnecessary browser tabs. Each Chrome or Edge tab consumes RAM and CPU. Closing 10 tabs can noticeably reduce CPU temperature.
⚠️ Suspicious 100% CPU usage? If a process you don't recognise is consuming 80–100% CPU with no clear reason — particularly processes with random alphanumeric names — this may be malware running cryptomining or other background tasks. Run a full Microsoft Defender scan immediately.
03
Software Fix · 0 cost · 3 minutes

Adjust Windows Power Plan & Limit CPU Usage

Easy

PCWorld recommends: "limiting CPU power to 75% for immediate heat reduction." Windows allows you to cap the maximum processor state — effectively telling the CPU never to run at full power even under heavy load. This trades a small amount of performance for a meaningful drop in heat output. For everyday work tasks — documents, email, browsing, video calls — you will rarely notice the performance difference.

Search "Power plan" in Start → open Choose a power plan → Change plan settings → Change advanced power settings.
Expand Processor power management → Maximum processor state.
Change the value from 100% to 70–80%. Click Apply → OK.
Alternatively, switch to the Power Saver plan from the main power plan screen — this reduces CPU speed and screen brightness to minimise heat and extend battery life simultaneously.
Windows 11 path: Settings → System → Power → Power mode → switch from "Best performance" to "Balanced" or "Best power efficiency." This is the quickest single-click improvement for overheating on Windows 11.
Reduce screen brightness too: Lenovo advises: "Lower the screen brightness to reduce power consumption and heat generation." Your display is a meaningful heat source — even 20% brightness reduction can drop temperatures 2–4°C.
🇰🇪 Kenya battery context: Running in Power Saver mode not only reduces heat but also extends your battery life — critical for Kenyan users who work without reliable access to power sockets, especially on campus or during load-shedding hours.

"Most overheating problems are solved by the simple fixes first — surface placement, vent cleaning, and closing background processes. Reach for hardware solutions only after ruling out these software and environmental causes." — LaptopBRO, How to Fix Laptop Overheating: Causes, Solutions & Practical Tips (December 2025)

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Group 02 · Maintenance Fixes · Low Cost
Physical Cleaning & Cooling Accessories
04
Physical Fix · KSh 200–500 · 15 minutes

Clean the Vents and Cooling Fan with Compressed Air

Easy

This is the single highest-impact fix for most chronically overheating laptops — particularly machines that are 2+ years old and have never been cleaned. Tweaktown's guide is clear: "Make it a habit to clean your laptop's vents regularly. Use a can of compressed air to blow out dust, holding it at an angle so debris doesn't get pushed further inside." A can of compressed air costs KSh 200–500 in Nairobi's computer shops and takes 10 minutes to use. The temperature improvement can be dramatic — often 10–20°C.

Shut down your laptop completely and unplug from power. Do not just close the lid — fully power off.
Locate all ventilation grilles — usually on the sides, rear, and bottom of the laptop. On most designs, hot air exits from the rear or sides.
Hold the compressed air can upright — tilting it can spray propellant onto components. Use short bursts (2–3 seconds) aimed directly into the vents at a slight angle.
Blow air into the exhaust vents (the ones hot air exits through). You will likely see dust puffing out of the intake vents. This is exactly what should happen.
Also spray into any keyboard gaps and the area around the fan intake on the bottom. Repeat until no more dust emerges.
Wait 5 minutes for any propellant to evaporate, then power the laptop back on and check temperatures with HWiNFO.
⚠️ Never use a vacuum cleaner on laptop vents — it generates static electricity that can damage components. Avoid sharp objects near vents. Compressed air only.
🇰🇪 Kenya cleaning schedule: In Nairobi's dust-heavy environment, clean your laptop vents every 3–4 months — not annually as global guides suggest. EX-UK refurbished laptops should be cleaned immediately on arrival, as they may have accumulated dust from UK use before shipping.
05
Accessory Fix · KSh 2,000–5,000

Use a Laptop Cooling Pad

Easy

TechTimes confirms cooling pads as an effective solution: "Investing in a model with effective cooling can reduce the need for extensive aftermarket solutions." A cooling pad sits beneath your laptop, uses one or more fans to direct cool air upward into the laptop's intake vents, and typically reduces operating temperatures by 5–15°C depending on the design and how well it aligns with your laptop's ventilation layout.

For Kenyan users working in warm environments — or using laptops for extended gaming, video editing, or data processing sessions — a cooling pad is one of the best value investments for sustained performance and component longevity. They connect via USB (powered by your laptop's USB port, requiring no separate power source) and range from simple passive stands to multi-fan active coolers.

Identify where your laptop's air intake vents are — usually on the bottom. Cooling pads are most effective when their fans align with these intake positions.
Look for cooling pads in Nairobi's Computer Centre, electronics shops in the CBD, or on Jumia. Price range: KSh 2,000–5,000 for a quality model with 2–3 fans.
Connect via USB to your laptop. Most pads have a LED indicator when fans are running. Test immediately with HWiNFO to verify the temperature drop.
Passive vs active: A simple elevated stand (no fans) still helps by improving airflow — and costs KSh 800–1,500. A fan-equipped active pad provides more cooling but the difference matters most under heavy loads. For document work, a stand is sufficient. For gaming, video editing, or sustained heavy tasks, choose an active pad.
💡
Overheating on an old or second-hand laptop that's been running hot for months?
If you bought a refurbished laptop and it has been running hot since day one, it likely needs a vent clean and possibly thermal paste replacement — maintenance that should have been done before sale. At Tech Convenience Store, every laptop we sell has been hardware-checked before leaving our store. If you are dealing with persistent overheating on your current machine, WhatsApp us on 0714 722 264 for advice — or browse our quality refurbished range starting from KSh 18,000.
🧩
Group 03 · Software Fixes
Driver, BIOS & Software Updates
06
Software Fix · Free · 15 minutes

Update Drivers and BIOS Firmware

Medium

The Windows Club notes: "Keeping your BIOS up to date will not only eliminate overheating issues but also resolve any other BIOS-related problems. When you update your BIOS, the fans run more efficiently, reduce CPU load, and handle other system tasks more effectively." Outdated BIOS and driver files can cause the fan controller to mismanage cooling — keeping fans slower than necessary or failing to ramp them up under load.

Update GPU drivers: Right-click Start → Device Manager → Display adapters → right-click your GPU → Update driver → Search automatically. Or visit your GPU manufacturer's site (Intel, AMD, Nvidia).
Update chipset drivers: Visit your laptop manufacturer's support site (dell.com/support, hp.com/support, lenovo.com/support), enter your model number, and download the latest chipset, thermal management, and fan control drivers.
Update BIOS/UEFI firmware: On the same support page, look for a BIOS or firmware update. Download and run it carefully — ensure your laptop is plugged in before updating BIOS. Never interrupt a BIOS update.
After all updates, restart and monitor temperatures with HWiNFO for 30 minutes under normal workload.
⚠️ BIOS update risk: A failed BIOS update can brick your laptop. Only update BIOS if you are comfortable doing so, your laptop is fully charged and plugged in, and you have confirmed the update version on your manufacturer's official site. If in doubt, skip the BIOS update and apply the driver updates only.
🔬
Group 04 · Hardware Fixes · Advanced
Thermal Paste & Fan Replacement
07
Hardware Fix · KSh 500–2,000 · Advanced

Replace the Thermal Paste on the CPU and GPU

Advanced

PCWorld's 2026 guide recommends "replacing thermal paste every 3–4 years." Thermal paste — also called thermal compound or thermal grease — is a heat-conductive material applied between the CPU/GPU chip and the metal heatsink that sits above it. It fills microscopic air gaps to maximise heat transfer. Over time, it dries out, shrinks, and cracks — dramatically increasing thermal resistance. On a 3-year-old laptop with original thermal paste, replacement can reduce CPU temperatures by 15–25°C.

TechTimes confirms: "Reapplying thermal paste between the CPU/GPU and heatsinks enhances heat transfer and improves cooling." Signs that paste replacement is needed: CPU reaching 90°C+ under light loads, fans constantly running at maximum speed, and performance throttling even without intensive tasks.

This requires opening the laptop. Research your specific model on iFixit.com for the disassembly guide — the process varies significantly between brands and models.
You need: a thermal paste tube (Arctic MX-4 or Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut are both excellent — KSh 500–1,500 in Nairobi), isopropyl alcohol (90%+ for cleaning), and a lint-free cloth.
Carefully remove the heatsink. Use isopropyl alcohol and a lint-free cloth to thoroughly clean off all old paste from both the CPU/GPU chip and the heatsink surface.
Apply a rice-grain or pea-sized amount of new thermal paste to the centre of the CPU and GPU chips. Do not spread it manually — the heatsink pressure will spread it when reattached.
Reattach the heatsink firmly and evenly. Reassemble the laptop, power on, and check temperatures immediately with HWiNFO.
Not comfortable opening your laptop? This is a task where professional help is worth it. A Nairobi laptop technician can replace thermal paste for KSh 1,500–3,000 including labour — a worthwhile investment given the temperature improvement. Ask us at Tech Convenience Store for recommendations or guidance.
🇰🇪 EX-UK refurbished context: Laptops 3–5 years old arriving in Kenya often have original thermal paste that has never been replaced — a 3-year-old EliteBook or ThinkPad from the UK may have thermal paste that is overdue for replacement. This is one of the most impactful maintenance steps for older refurbished machines.
08
Hardware Fix · KSh 2,000–6,000 · Advanced

Inspect, Clean, or Replace the Cooling Fan

Advanced

Lenovo's cooling guide advises: "Checking if the laptop's cooling fan is working properly. If it's not, you might need to replace it." A fan that rattles, grinds, or spins inconsistently (you can observe this by listening and watching Task Manager's CPU temperature correlate with fan speed) may have worn bearings or accumulated debris that simple compressed air cannot clear.

Listen carefully to your fan when the laptop is under load (run a CPU-intensive task). A healthy fan hums smoothly. A grinding, rattling, or intermittently stopping fan has a mechanical issue.
Use a free fan speed tool like HWiNFO to confirm whether the fan is spinning at the expected RPM for the reported CPU temperature. If temperatures are 90°C+ and fan speed shows 0 RPM or very low RPM — the fan is failing.
If the fan is simply dusty but structurally intact, compressed air cleaning (Fix 4) can restore performance. Direct a short burst into the fan area specifically.
If the fan has failed mechanically: identify your laptop model, find the compatible replacement fan on AliExpress, Jumia, or computer shops in Nairobi's CBD, and replace it following your model's iFixit disassembly guide.
Fan replacement cost in Nairobi: Replacement laptop fans typically cost KSh 1,500–4,000 for the part. Labour at a local technician adds KSh 500–1,500. For a good quality machine like a ThinkPad or EliteBook, this repair is absolutely worth making — the rest of the hardware will outlast the fan by years.

Section 04

Prevention Checklist — Keep Your Laptop Cool Long-Term

The best time to prevent overheating is before it starts. LaptopBRO summarises: "With a few simple adjustments and regular maintenance, you can keep your device running smoothly for years." Use this checklist as a routine — not a one-time fix.

Always use on hard, flat surfaces

Never on beds, sofas, or pillows. A laptop stand for KSh 800 solves this permanently.

Clean vents every 3 months (Kenya)

Nairobi's dust environment requires more frequent cleaning than global guides recommend.

Keep background processes minimal

Close apps you are not using. Disable unnecessary startup programs via Task Manager.

Use Balanced power mode by default

Only switch to High Performance when running intensive tasks that genuinely need it.

Keep Windows and drivers updated

Updated fan control drivers and BIOS firmware improve thermal management efficiency.

Work in a cool, ventilated room

Avoid direct sunlight through windows and work in air-conditioned spaces when possible.

Monitor temperature quarterly

Run HWiNFO every few months. A rising baseline temperature signals a maintenance need before failure.

Replace thermal paste every 3–4 years

Schedule this as a routine maintenance item — like changing oil in a car. Do not wait for crisis temperatures.

Invest in a cooling pad for heavy tasks

Video editing, gaming, or extended heavy loads benefit significantly from an active cooling pad.

Use one antivirus — not two or three

Multiple antivirus programs scanning simultaneously is a common hidden cause of high CPU usage and heat.

Section 05

When Overheating Means It's Time to Replace Your Laptop

Not every overheating laptop can be saved — and not every one should be. If you have cleaned the vents, replaced the thermal paste, installed a new fan, updated every driver, and the machine still runs critically hot under basic workloads — the thermal management system itself may be compromised at the hardware level. This happens on laptops with failed heat pipes (the copper tubes that carry heat from the chip to the heatsink), cracked heatsinks, or motherboard-level issues.

The practical test: if your laptop is more than 5 years old, runs above 90°C on light tasks even after all maintenance, and repair costs are estimated at above 60% of a replacement machine's value — replacing is the more economical decision. A quality EX-UK refurbished Dell Latitude, HP EliteBook, or Lenovo ThinkPad at our Nairobi CBD store starts from KSh 24,500 — with verified hardware, clean thermal paste applied before sale, and a warranty. That is often the more rational choice than investing KSh 8,000–12,000 in a machine that will continue to struggle.

🇰🇪 Our Kenya-Specific Overheating Summary

Kenya's warm climate, Nairobi's dusty environment, the prevalence of bed-and-sofa laptop usage, and the age of many refurbished machines in the market combine to make overheating more common and more impactful here than in the markets most laptop guides are written for. The three highest-impact fixes for Kenyan users in order: 1) Move to a hard surface and clean the vents with compressed air. 2) Close background processes and set Balanced power mode. 3) Replace thermal paste on machines 3+ years old. Do these three and most overheating problems resolve completely. For persistent issues, WhatsApp us on 0714 722 264.


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