A webcam that refuses to work is often a software or permissions issue rather than a hardware failure. Run through these checks before assuming the camera is dead.

Check the Privacy Settings

Windows has built-in privacy controls that can block apps from using the camera. Go to Settings > Privacy & security > Camera. Make sure Camera access is switched on at the top. Then scroll down and confirm that the specific app you want to use (Teams, Zoom, the Camera app) is also permitted.

Is There a Physical Shutter or Switch?

Many laptops have a privacy shutter that slides over the lens, and some have a dedicated camera disable key on the keyboard. Check the bezel around the screen for a sliding cover and look along the function-key row for a camera icon.

Test in the Built-in Camera App

Click Start, search for Camera, and open it. If the built-in app shows your image, the camera hardware is fine and the problem is app-specific — check that app's own settings or reinstall it. If the Camera app shows a black screen or an error code, continue below.

Update or Reinstall the Driver

  1. Open Device Manager (right-click Start).
  2. Expand Cameras or Imaging devices.
  3. Right-click the camera entry and choose Update driver.
  4. If that does not help, right-click and choose Uninstall device, then restart your PC. Windows will reinstall the driver automatically.

For External USB Webcams

Try a different USB port, preferably one directly on the PC rather than through a hub. Also try a different cable if the webcam has a detachable one. Check Device Manager for any entry with a yellow warning triangle under Cameras or Universal Serial Bus controllers.

If you are still seeing a black screen or error after all of the above, let us know and we can help narrow it down.