Computer Hangs on Startup?

Your computer powers on, the manufacturer logo appears — and then nothing. It just sits there, frozen, before Windows ever loads. A computer hanging on startup is one of the most frustrating problems because the machine is clearly alive, but completely unresponsive. The good news is that in most cases, this is a diagnosable and fixable problem. This page covers every common cause and what to do about each one.

What Does It Mean When a Computer Hangs on Startup?

When your computer hangs on startup, it means the system has started the boot process but got stuck somewhere along the way before fully loading the operating system. This freeze can happen at the BIOS screen, the loading spinner, the Windows logo, or even on a completely black screen with just a cursor. Where exactly it freezes is actually useful information — different freeze points point to different causes.

  • Corrupted Windows System Files

The most frequent cause of a PC freezing on startup is corrupted or missing Windows system files. This typically happens after a failed Windows update, an improper shutdown during an update, or a sudden power cut while the system was writing data. When core system files are damaged, Windows starts loading and then simply stops — it has nowhere to go.

  • Failing or Faulty Hard Drive

A hard drive that is beginning to fail will cause your computer to hang on startup consistently. The system tries to read the operating system from the drive, encounters bad sectors or read errors, and freezes while waiting for data that never comes. This is one of the more serious causes because a failing drive can lead to permanent data loss if not addressed quickly.

  • Overloaded Startup Programs

When too many programs are set to launch at startup, your system can become so overwhelmed in those first few seconds that it appears completely frozen. Your PC hanging at startup in this case is not a hardware failure — it’s a resource management problem. The computer is technically working, just buried under too many simultaneous processes fighting for RAM and CPU.

  • Corrupted or Outdated Drivers

A driver — particularly a GPU, storage, or chipset driver — that has become corrupted or is incompatible with a recent Windows update is a well-known cause of startup freezing. The system loads to the point where it needs that driver, calls for it, and locks up when it gets a bad response. This often happens right after a major Windows update or a hardware change.

  • Malware or Virus Infection

Certain types of malware embed themselves in the boot sector or startup sequence and interfere directly with the loading process. A PC that hangs every time on startup — especially after visiting unknown websites or installing unverified software — should be treated as a potential infection until proven otherwise.