Windows 10 has been around for quite some time now, and it is very popular in the PC form factor, as many users prefer it for its ease of use and the reliability it provides in terms of support available. One such feature is the sleep feature that is used as a power-saving technique in mobile devices.
However, the bugs and errors it contains grow by the day. Many users have reported that their Windows 10 keeps going to sleep after some time randomly. This can be an annoying error, which can seriously hamper productivity by turning off your device mid-work.
Why Does My Laptop Keep Going To Sleep?
If your computer goes to sleep randomly, there is probably some misconfigured setting in your Windows that is causing this to happen. This is the case more often than not and has many users troubled over this simple issue. However, you will need to figure out which setting may be causing your computer to go into sleep randomly. Here I will discuss the various settings so that you don’t have to.
Sometimes outdated graphics can also turn off your screen, giving you the illusion that your Windows laptop keeps going to sleep. Some users have reported that this is the error that was troubling them, and is fairly easy to solve.
If you recently changed the theme in Windows, the screensaver settings may also have changed, reducing the timeout period.
Finally, there may also be some error with your battery and associated power settings. A faulty battery may be triggering the sleep settings. On the other hand, misconfigured power settings can activate battery savers when device becomes idle, leading to your device going into sleep mode.
[SOLVED] Windows 10 Keeps Going To Sleep!
With a vague idea about what might possibly be causing the error, you can now follow these steps if you see that your computer randomly goes to sleep.
Solution 1: Run The Power Troubleshooter
Microsoft recognized that there might arise some problems with its operating system. Hence, they have included a relatively powerful troubleshooter that can diagnose and solve most of the problems associated with your device.
It might be better to eliminate the possibility of something being wrong with your battery. To do this, run the power troubleshooter built within Windows 10.
- Open the Windows Settings You can use the keyboard shortcut Win + I.
- Click on Update & Security.
- Select Troubleshoot from the left pane.
- Locate and click on Power under Find and fix other problems.
- Click on the Run the Troubleshooter button that is displayed.
Let the troubleshooter run and diagnose any issues with your device. If it finds something, it will either fix that itself or show you the instructions to change the settings manually.
Solution 2: Change Your Screensaver Settings
Now that you have eliminated that there is no problem with your battery, you should try out this fix next.
If you recently changed your theme or screensaver, that might have changed some settings that are causing your laptop to go to sleep. It is better to take a look at the current settings and then change them accordingly.
- Right-click on an empty space on the desktop and select Personalization from the context menu.
- Select the Lock screen from the menu on the left.
- Now pick Screen saver settings from the right pane.
- Set the Wait time to any higher value, for example, 20 minutes or so. Now click Apply and OK to save changes.
Alternatively, you can choose not to use any screensaver.
After this, check if the error still persists and your Windows 10 keeps going to sleep. This should solve the issue.
Solution 3: Restore The Power Plan Settings
If the power plan settings are not configured correctly or become corrupted for some reason, you will see that your computer turns off the display randomly. To do this, try resetting the power options.
- In the start, menu search, type and enter power settings. Open the Power & sleep settings from the search results.
- From the right pane, select Additional power settings under Related settings.
- You should now see all the power plans on your PC. Locate your selected power plan and click Change plan settings next to it.
- Now click on Restore default settings for this plan.
If any power plans related issue was causing this error, it should now be resolved.
Solution 4: Turn Off Hybrid Sleep
Hybrid Sleep is primarily designed for desktop computers. In this mode, Windows puts any open documents and programs in memory and on your hard disk and then puts your computer into a low-power state so that you can quickly resume your work. That way, if a power failure occurs, Windows can restore your work from your hard disk.
However, this is sometimes known to cause issues with your device, so turning it off may be a good diagnostic step. Simply follow these steps:
- Open Control Panel from desktop or a Run window.
- Select Small or Large icons. Click on Power Options.
- Locate your selected power plan and click Change plan settings next to it.
- Select Change advanced power settings, a new window should open.
- Here, look for Sleep. Under this, select and turn off Allow hybrid sleep.
Once you restart your system, you should see that your Windows is not going into sleep mode randomly.
Solution 5: Modify Registry To Change Unattended Sleep Timeout
If none of the methods help, you can try modifying the Registry for a simple change which should solve your laptop keeps going to sleep error.
- Open Run dialog by pressing Win + R.
- Type regedit and press Enter or click OK to launch the Registry Editor. Click Yes on the User Account Control prompt.
- Navigate to the following location by pasting this path in the address bar of the Registry Editor
Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Power\PowerSettings\238C9FA8-0AAD-41ED-83F4-97BE242C8F20\7bc4a2f9-d8fc-4469-b07b-33eb785aaca0
- Double click to modify the Attributes
- Change the Value data to 2 and click OK to save changes.
- In the start, menu search, type and enter power settings. Open the Power & sleep settings from the search results.
- From the right pane, select Additional power settings under Related settings.
- You should now see all the power plans on your PC. Locate your selected power plan and click Change plan settings next to it.
- Now click on Change advanced power settings.
- Click Change settings that are currently unavailable.
- Go to Sleep > System unattended sleep timeout and change the value from 2 to 20 minutes.
Wrapping Up
So there you have it. Now you know how to solve the ‘Windows 10 keeps going to sleep’ error on your device using one or a combination of the fixes given here. Tell us in the comments which solution worked for you.
Morten Otterstad says
THANK YOU for this guide!
I got suddenly haunted by this issue, but my kids profiles on my computer acted as normal. Been SO irritating, but then I found this guide, actually read it and voila: Screens turns off as they should!
Colleen Roberts says
Most annoying when in the middle of a programe this site keeps going off then have to restart it each time
David Knight says
My windows 10 computer keeps going to sleep after a few momuments .
Is there a restore to an early time?
Daniel Munoz says
None of these fixed the issue for me.