Setting up a second display should be straightforward, but Windows does not always detect a new monitor automatically. Here is how to coax it into working.
Physical Checks First
- Make sure the monitor is plugged in to a power source and switched on.
- Confirm the cable is firmly seated at both ends — at the monitor and at the PC.
- Check that the monitor is set to the correct input (HDMI 1, DisplayPort, etc.) using its own on-screen menu.
- Try a different cable if you have one available, and try a different port on the PC if there is more than one.
Force Windows to Detect the Monitor
- Right-click the desktop and choose Display settings.
- Scroll down and click Detect (Windows 10) or the Detect button next to 'Multiple displays' (Windows 11).
- If a second display appears in the preview, use the dropdown to choose Extend these displays or Duplicate these displays.
Update the Graphics Driver
An outdated GPU driver is a common reason Windows ignores a second monitor. Open Device Manager, expand Display adapters, right-click your graphics card, and choose Update driver > Search automatically. Restart the PC afterwards and check again.
Try a Different Display Mode
Press Win + P to open the projection panel. Cycle through PC screen only, Duplicate, Extend, and Second screen only. Sometimes selecting a mode here wakes up a monitor that detection missed.
Check the Monitor Itself
Borrow another monitor or TV and connect it to the same port with the same cable. If the replacement is detected, your original monitor may have a fault. If nothing is detected, focus on the PC's graphics output.
Still stuck? Ask us — describe your cable type (HDMI, DisplayPort, VGA) and what model GPU or laptop you have.