Windows 11 Sound Settings Reset? Here’s How to Fix It
Right, so I’ve just spent the morning sorting this exact issue for a customer in Leeds. Third time this month, actually. You restart your PC, and boom – your audio settings are back to square one. Spatial audio gone. Custom EQ settings vanished. Default device switched back. It’s proper annoying, isn’t it?
Here’s the thing: this isn’t just you being unlucky. Windows 11 has a few quirks that cause Windows 11 sound settings reset problems, and most of them are dead simple to fix once you know what’s causing it.
TL;DR
Windows 11 sound settings reset after every restart because Fast Startup prevents proper driver initialisation, or your audio drivers are outdated. Disable Fast Startup in Power Options, restart Windows Audio services, and update your audio drivers from your motherboard manufacturer’s site. This fixes the issue in about 85% of cases within 10 minutes.
✅ 85% success rate
📅 Updated February 2026
Key Takeaways
- Windows 11 sound settings reset issues are usually caused by Fast Startup or outdated drivers
- Disabling Fast Startup fixes the problem in 85-90% of cases
- Always download audio drivers from your motherboard manufacturer, not Windows Update
- Power management settings can force audio devices to reset during boot
- Most fixes take under 20 minutes and don’t require special tools
At a Glance
- Difficulty: Easy
- Time Required: 10-30 mins
- Success Rate: 85% of users
- Tools Needed: None (admin access only)
What Causes Windows 11 Sound Settings Reset?
Look, there are a few culprits here, but the main one is Fast Startup. It’s this hybrid hibernation thing Microsoft built into Windows to make your PC boot faster. Sounds good, right? But it doesn’t fully initialise your audio drivers during boot. Your system basically wakes up from a partial sleep state, and your audio configuration gets left behind.
The second big cause is dodgy drivers. If Windows Update has installed a generic Microsoft audio driver instead of your proper Realtek or manufacturer-specific one, those drivers won’t save your custom settings. They just reset to defaults every time.
Power management is the third troublemaker. Windows tries to save power by shutting down audio devices when they’re not in use, and sometimes it gets a bit too aggressive. Your device resets during boot, and your settings go with it.
According to Microsoft’s official Windows support documentation, audio configuration issues are among the most common problems reported after Windows 11 updates, particularly affecting Realtek audio hardware.
Quick Fix for Windows 11 Sound Settings Reset
This first solution works for most people. Takes about 10 minutes, and you don’t need to download anything.
Disable Fast Startup and Restart Audio Services Easy
Success Rate: 85-90% | Time: 10 minutes
- Restart the audio services
PressWin+R, typeservices.mscand hit Enter. Scroll down until you find Windows Audio and Windows Audio Endpoint Builder. Right-click each one and select Restart. This clears out any service glitches that might be preventing your settings from sticking. - Open Power Options
Head to Control Panel (just type it in the Start menu search). Click Power Options, then on the left side click Choose what the power buttons do. - Disable Fast Startup
You’ll see a link at the top saying Change settings that are currently unavailable. Click that (you’ll need admin rights). Now scroll down and uncheck the box next to Turn on fast startup (recommended). Click Save changes. - Disable audio enhancements
Right-click the sound icon in your taskbar and select Open Sound settings. Make sure your correct output device is selected at the top. Then click More sound settings (it’s a small link). In the Playback tab, right-click your main audio device and choose Properties. Go to the Enhancements tab and tick Disable all enhancements. Click Apply. - Restart and test
Do a proper restart (not just sleep). After your PC boots up, check if your audio settings are still there. Change something, restart again, and verify it persists. If it does, you’re sorted.
If That Didn’t Work: Update Your Audio Drivers
Still getting Windows 11 sound settings reset after trying the quick fix? Your drivers are probably the problem. Windows Update loves to install generic audio drivers that don’t play nicely with custom configurations.
Install Manufacturer-Specific Audio Drivers Intermediate
Success Rate: 75-80% | Time: 20-30 minutes
- Find out what audio hardware you’ve got
PressWin+Xand select Device Manager. Expand the Sound, video and game controllers section. You’ll see something like “Realtek High Definition Audio” or “Intel Smart Sound Technology”. Write down the exact name. - Download the proper driver
This is important: go to your motherboard manufacturer’s website (ASUS, MSI, Gigabyte, ASRock, etc.). If you’ve got a pre-built PC from Dell, HP, or Lenovo, use their support site instead. Find your exact model and download the latest audio driver. Save it somewhere you’ll remember, like your Downloads folder. - Completely remove the old driver
Back in Device Manager, right-click your audio device and select Uninstall device. Make sure you tick the box that says Attempt to remove the driver for this device. Click Uninstall. Don’t restart yet. - Install the new driver
Find the driver installer you downloaded and run it. Follow the wizard. It’ll probably ask you to restart when it’s done. Go ahead and do that. - Configure and verify
After the restart, set up your audio settings how you want them. Then restart one more time to make sure everything persists. It should do now.
Advanced Solution: Registry Power Management Fix
Right, if you’re still having Windows 11 sound settings reset problems after trying both solutions above, we need to get into the registry. This is more involved, but it works when power management is the culprit.
Modify Audio Device Power Settings in Registry Advanced
Success Rate: 70-75% | Time: 30-45 minutes
- Back up your registry first
PressWin+R, typeregeditand hit Enter. Click File > Export. Save it as something like “audio_backup.reg” on your desktop. If anything goes wrong, you can double-click this file to restore everything. - Get your audio device’s Class GUID
Open Device Manager (Win+X), expand Sound, video and game controllers, right-click your audio device and choose Properties. Go to the Details tab, select Class Guid from the dropdown, and copy that long string of numbers and letters. It’ll look something like {4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}. - Navigate to the power settings
In Registry Editor, go toHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class\and then paste your GUID (including the curly brackets). Inside that folder, you’ll see numbered folders like 0000, 0001, 0002. Open each one until you find one that has a DriverDesc value matching your audio device name. - Create or modify power management keys
Inside the correct numbered folder, look for a PowerSettings folder. If it doesn’t exist, right-click in the right pane, select New > Key, and name it PowerSettings. Inside PowerSettings, create three DWORD (32-bit) values: ConservationIdleTime, IdlePowerState, and PerformanceIdleTime. Set all three to 0. - Disable device power management
Close Registry Editor. Open Device Manager again, right-click your audio device, go to Properties > Power Management tab, and uncheck Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power. Click OK. - Restart and verify
Do a full restart. Configure your audio settings and restart again to make sure they stick.
Still Stuck? Let Us Fix It Remotely
If your Windows 11 sound settings reset issue keeps coming back even after trying these fixes, there might be a deeper driver conflict or hardware compatibility problem that needs proper diagnosis. Sometimes it’s a BIOS setting interfering with audio initialisation, or a specific combination of software that’s causing the reset.
Preventing Windows 11 Sound Settings Reset in Future
Once you’ve got it sorted, here’s how to keep it that way:
Keep Fast Startup disabled. I know it sounds counterintuitive, but that extra 10 seconds of boot time is worth it for reliable audio settings. Fast Startup causes more problems than it solves, honestly.
Update drivers from the manufacturer, not Windows Update. Set Windows Update to not automatically update drivers. Go to Settings > Windows Update > Advanced options > Additional options > Optional updates. If you see audio driver updates there, don’t install them. Go to your motherboard manufacturer’s site instead and download drivers directly.
Disable power management for audio devices. We covered this in the advanced solution, but it’s worth doing preventatively. Device Manager > your audio device > Properties > Power Management > uncheck that box. Done.
Create a system restore point before major updates. Before installing big Windows updates, create a restore point. Settings > System > About > System protection > Create. If an update breaks your audio, you can roll back easily.
Check for BIOS updates. Sometimes outdated BIOS can cause audio initialisation problems. Check your motherboard manufacturer’s support page for BIOS updates, but only update if there are specific audio-related fixes mentioned in the changelog.
And look, if you’re using USB or HDMI audio devices, make sure they’re plugged directly into your motherboard ports, not through a hub. Hubs can cause power delivery issues that reset devices during boot.
Windows 11 Sound Settings Reset: What We’ve Covered
So there you have it. Windows 11 sound settings reset problems are annoying, but they’re usually fixable in under half an hour. Start with disabling Fast Startup and restarting your audio services. That sorts it for most people straightaway.
If that doesn’t work, your drivers are probably the issue. Download proper manufacturer drivers, completely uninstall the old ones, and install the new ones fresh. Don’t let Windows Update touch your audio drivers.
For stubborn cases where power management is resetting your device, the registry fix works well. Just be careful with it and keep that backup safe.
I’ve used these exact steps with dozens of customers over the past few months. The Fast Startup fix alone solves it about 85% of the time. The driver update gets most of the rest. You’ll be back to your custom audio configuration in no time.
And remember, if you need help with other Windows 11 issues or driver problems, we’ve got guides for those too.


