AirPods work with Windows laptops through Bluetooth, just like any wireless headphones. This guide shows you exactly how to pair them, fix common problems, and get the best sound quality.
The Basic Steps
- Put your AirPods in pairing mode by holding the setup button on the case
- Open Windows Bluetooth settings (Settings > Devices > Bluetooth)
- Click “Add Bluetooth or other device”
- Select your AirPods from the list
- Click “Connect”
That’s the core process. Now let’s break down each step so you can troubleshoot any issues.
Before You Start: What You Need
Your Windows laptop needs Bluetooth capability. Most laptops made after 2015 have it built in. Here’s how to check:
Check if your laptop has Bluetooth:
- Press Windows key + I
- Go to Devices
- Look for “Bluetooth & other devices” in the left menu
- If you see it, you have Bluetooth
If your laptop doesn’t have Bluetooth, you need a USB Bluetooth adapter. They cost $10-20 and plug into any USB port.
What works:
- All AirPods models (AirPods 1, 2, 3, Pro, Pro 2, Max)
- Windows 10 and Windows 11
- Any Windows laptop with Bluetooth 4.0 or newer

Step by Step: Connecting AirPods to Windows 10
Step 1: Prepare Your AirPods
Put both AirPods in the charging case. Close the lid and wait 5 seconds.
Open the lid but keep the AirPods inside the case.
Find the small circular button on the back of the case (for AirPods Pro and newer) or on the front (for original AirPods).
Press and hold this button until the status light starts flashing white. This takes about 3 seconds. The flashing white light means your AirPods are in pairing mode.
For AirPods Max:
- Press and hold the noise control button until the status light flashes white
- Located on the right ear cup near the Digital Crown
Step 2: Open Windows Bluetooth Settings
Click the Windows Start button (bottom left corner).
Click the Settings gear icon.
Select “Devices” from the menu.
Click “Bluetooth & other devices” on the left side.
Make sure the Bluetooth toggle at the top is turned ON (it should be blue).
Step 3: Add Your AirPods
Click the big “+” button that says “Add Bluetooth or other device” at the top.
A new window opens. Click “Bluetooth” (the first option).
Windows starts searching for nearby Bluetooth devices.
Wait 5-10 seconds. You should see your AirPods appear in the list. They’ll show as “AirPods,” “AirPods Pro,” or whatever name you gave them on your iPhone.
Click on your AirPods name.
Windows connects automatically. You’ll see “Connected” appear under the AirPods name.
Click “Done” to close the window.
Your AirPods are now paired. They’ll appear in your Bluetooth devices list.
Step by Step: Connecting AirPods to Windows 11
Windows 11 changed the settings layout. Here’s the updated process:
Step 1: Put AirPods in Pairing Mode
Same process as Windows 10. Open the case, hold the button until the light flashes white.
Step 2: Access Quick Settings
Click the speaker icon in the taskbar (bottom right, near the clock).
Right-click on the Bluetooth icon in the Quick Settings panel.
Select “Go to Settings” or click the arrow next to Bluetooth.
Alternatively, press Windows key + I, then click “Bluetooth & devices” from the left sidebar.
Step 3: Pair Your AirPods
Make sure Bluetooth is toggled ON.
Click “Add device” at the top.
Choose “Bluetooth” from the options.
Select your AirPods when they appear (usually takes 5-15 seconds).
Wait for “Connected” to appear.
Close the window.
Your AirPods connect immediately and should work with all audio.
Reconnecting AirPods After First Pairing
Once paired, reconnecting is simple:
Automatic reconnection:
- Take AirPods out of the case
- Put them in your ears
- Play audio on your laptop
- They usually connect within 5-10 seconds
Manual reconnection:
- Click the speaker icon in the taskbar
- Click the Bluetooth icon
- Find your AirPods in the device list
- Click “Connect”
Fastest method for Windows 11:
- Click the Bluetooth icon in Quick Settings
- Your AirPods appear if nearby
- Click them to connect instantly
Common Connection Problems and Fixes
AirPods Won’t Show Up in Bluetooth List
Try these solutions in order:
Reset your AirPods:
- Put AirPods in the case
- Close the lid, wait 30 seconds
- Open Settings > Bluetooth on your laptop
- Find your AirPods and click “Remove device”
- Hold the setup button for 15 seconds until the light flashes amber, then white
- Try pairing again
Check if AirPods are connected to another device:
- AirPods can only connect to one device at a time
- Disconnect from your iPhone/iPad first
- Put them back in pairing mode
Restart Bluetooth on your laptop:
- Turn Bluetooth OFF
- Wait 10 seconds
- Turn it back ON
- Search for devices again
Update Bluetooth drivers:
- Press Windows key + X
- Select “Device Manager”
- Expand “Bluetooth”
- Right-click your Bluetooth adapter
- Choose “Update driver”
- Select “Search automatically for drivers”
AirPods Connect But No Sound
This happens because Windows selected the wrong audio output.
Fix it:
Right-click the speaker icon in your taskbar.
Select “Open Sound settings.”
Under “Choose your output device,” select your AirPods from the dropdown menu.
Test by playing music or a YouTube video.
Advanced audio fix:
If sound still doesn’t work, check the audio format:
- Right-click speaker icon > Sounds
- Click “Playback” tab
- Find your AirPods, right-click, select “Properties”
- Click “Advanced” tab
- Change format to “16 bit, 44100 Hz (CD Quality)”
- Click Apply, then OK
Poor Audio Quality or Choppy Sound
Bluetooth interference causes most audio quality problems.
Improve connection quality:
Move closer to your laptop (within 3-6 feet works best).
Remove obstacles between AirPods and laptop.
Turn off other Bluetooth devices nearby.
Close bandwidth-heavy programs (video calls, large downloads).
Disable Bluetooth on nearby phones or tablets.
Change audio codec:
Windows sometimes uses the wrong codec for AirPods:
- Right-click speaker icon > Sounds
- Playback tab > Find AirPods > Properties
- Advanced tab > Default Format
- Try different sample rates (start with 44100 Hz)
- Test each setting with audio
Clean your AirPods:
- Earwax and debris block sound
- Use a soft, dry cloth
- Gently clean the speaker mesh
- Apple’s official cleaning guide has detailed instructions
AirPods Keep Disconnecting
Battery issues:
Check AirPods battery on your iPhone (if you have one) or by the case light.
Charge the case fully before troubleshooting further.
Low battery causes random disconnections.
Power management interference:
Windows puts Bluetooth to sleep to save power:
- Open Device Manager (Windows key + X)
- Expand “Bluetooth”
- Right-click your Bluetooth adapter
- Select “Properties”
- Click “Power Management” tab
- Uncheck “Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power”
- Click OK
Restart your laptop after this change.
Disable audio enhancements:
Windows audio features sometimes conflict:
- Right-click speaker icon > Sounds
- Playback tab > AirPods > Properties
- Enhancements tab (or Spatial sound tab)
- Check “Disable all enhancements”
- Apply > OK
Microphone Not Working
AirPods have microphones, but Windows needs configuration.
Set AirPods as input device:
Right-click speaker icon > Sound settings.
Scroll down to “Input.”
Select your AirPods from the dropdown under “Choose your input device.”
Click “Test your microphone” and speak to verify it works.
For apps like Zoom or Discord:
Open the app’s audio settings.
Manually select AirPods as the microphone input.
Each app has separate audio settings that override Windows defaults.
Microphone quality note:
AirPods switch to lower audio quality when using the microphone. This is normal for all Bluetooth headphones. The sound becomes more “phone call” quality because Bluetooth bandwidth is limited.
Understanding AirPods Limitations on Windows
AirPods lose some features when connected to Windows laptops:
What doesn’t work:
- Automatic ear detection (music doesn’t pause when you remove them)
- Battery level indicator in Windows (no easy way to check)
- Siri voice commands
- Seamless device switching between Apple devices
- Spatial audio with head tracking
- Automatic device switching
- “Hey Siri” functionality
What still works:
- Touch controls (tap to play/pause, double tap to skip)
- Active Noise Cancellation (AirPods Pro)
- Transparency mode (AirPods Pro)
- Audio playback at full quality
- Microphone for calls and recordings
Physical controls on Windows:
| AirPod Action | Windows Result |
|---|---|
| Single tap (AirPods 1/2) | Play/pause |
| Double tap (AirPods 1/2) | Skip forward |
| Press stem once (AirPods 3/Pro) | Play/pause |
| Press stem twice (AirPods 3/Pro) | Skip forward |
| Press stem three times (AirPods 3/Pro) | Skip backward |
| Long press stem (AirPods Pro) | Switch noise control modes |
You can’t customize these controls on Windows like you can on iPhone.
Maximizing Audio Quality on Windows
Windows and AirPods can deliver great sound with the right settings.
Choose the Right Audio Profile
Windows creates two profiles when AirPods connect:
Headphones profile (Stereo):
- High quality audio
- Use for music, videos, gaming
- No microphone access
Headset profile (Hands-Free):
- Lower quality audio
- Enables microphone
- Use only for calls
Windows sometimes picks the wrong one automatically.
Switch profiles manually:
Right-click speaker icon > Sounds.
Click Playback tab.
You’ll see your AirPods listed twice (usually as “Headphones” and “Headset”).
Right-click the “Headphones” version.
Click “Set as Default Device.”
For calls, switch to “Headset” version temporarily.
Disable Absolute Volume
Windows 10 has a feature that can cause volume problems:
Press Windows key + R.
Type regedit and press Enter.
Navigate to: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Bluetooth\Audio\AVRCP\CT
Right-click in the right pane > New > DWORD (32-bit) Value.
Name it DisableAbsoluteVolume.
Double-click it, set value to 1.
Click OK and restart your computer.
This fixes many volume control issues with Bluetooth headphones.
Update Audio Drivers
Outdated drivers cause connection and quality problems:
Visit your laptop manufacturer’s website (Dell, HP, Lenovo, etc.).
Find the support or downloads section.
Search for your laptop model.
Download the latest Bluetooth and audio drivers.
Install them and restart.
Alternatively, use Windows Update:
- Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update
- Click “Check for updates”
- Install any driver updates
Generic drivers work, but manufacturer-specific ones perform better.
Using Multiple Devices with Your AirPods
AirPods remember multiple paired devices but only connect to one at a time.
Switching between laptop and phone:
Disconnect from current device first:
- On Windows: Bluetooth settings > AirPods > Disconnect
- On iPhone: Bluetooth settings > AirPods (i) > Disconnect
Then connect to the other device normally.
iCloud device switching:
If you use Apple devices with the same iCloud account, AirPods switch automatically between them. This feature doesn’t work with Windows.
To use AirPods with Windows and iPhone easily:
- Keep them paired to both
- Manually disconnect from one before using the other
- Or forget the device you use less often and re-pair when needed
Pair with multiple Windows laptops:
AirPods can pair with multiple computers:
- Pair normally with first laptop
- Put AirPods in pairing mode again
- Pair with second laptop
- AirPods now remember both
- Connect manually to whichever laptop you want to use
They won’t auto-switch between Windows devices. You must connect manually each time.
Battery Life and Charging
AirPods battery lasts 4-6 hours depending on the model and usage.
Check battery without iPhone:
Windows doesn’t show AirPods battery natively. Here are workarounds:
Use the case LED:
- Green light = more than one full charge remaining
- Amber light = less than one full charge remaining
- Flashing amber = pairing mode or error
Third-party apps (use caution):
- Some apps claim to show AirPods battery on Windows
- Research carefully before installing
- Many require payment or contain ads
Listen for low battery warning:
- AirPods beep when battery is low (about 10% remaining)
- You have roughly 10-15 minutes before they die
Charging tips:
Place AirPods in case to charge (case must have power).
Case charges AirPods fully in about 20 minutes.
15 minutes in case provides 3 hours of listening time.
Charge case with Lightning cable (USB-C for AirPods Pro 2).
Case takes about 1 hour to charge fully.
Wireless charging works on compatible AirPods models (place case on Qi charger).
Alternatives If Connection Keeps Failing
If you’ve tried everything and AirPods still won’t work reliably:
USB Bluetooth adapter:
Built-in Bluetooth can be low quality. A dedicated adapter helps:
- Costs $15-25
- Plug into USB port
- Usually has better range and stability
- Supports newer Bluetooth versions
- Microsoft’s compatibility guide lists certified adapters
Different wireless headphones:
Some headphones work better with Windows:
- Look for “designed for Windows” or “multi-point connection”
- Sony, Bose, and Jabra make Windows-friendly options
- Multi-point lets you connect to laptop and phone simultaneously
Wired connection:
AirPods Max support wired audio through Lightning to 3.5mm cable.
Regular AirPods and AirPods Pro don’t have wired options.
Consider keeping backup wired earbuds for important calls or when battery dies.
Troubleshooting Checklist
Still having problems? Go through this complete checklist:
AirPods side:
- AirPods are charged (put in case for 5 minutes)
- Case is charged (green or amber light when opened)
- Removed from case properly (both AirPods)
- Setup button held until white flashing light appears
- Not connected to another device (iPhone, iPad, etc.)
- Clean (no debris blocking speakers or sensors)
Windows side:
- [Bluetooth is turned on
- Airplane mode is off
- No other Bluetooth devices interfering
- Bluetooth drivers updated
- Windows fully updated (Settings > Update & Security)
- Computer restarted recently
- Within 10 feet of laptop with clear line of sight
Settings side:
- AirPods selected as output device
- Volume turned up (both Windows and AirPods)
- Correct audio profile selected (Headphones for music)
- Audio enhancements disabled
- Power management not turning off Bluetooth
If nothing works:
- Unpair completely and start over
- Reset AirPods (hold button 15 seconds until amber then white flash)
- Contact Apple Support if AirPods don’t work with any device
- Contact laptop manufacturer if no Bluetooth devices work
Summary Table: Connection Quick Reference
| Task | Steps | Time Needed |
|---|---|---|
| First time pairing | Hold button > Open Bluetooth settings > Add device | 2 minutes |
| Daily reconnection | Take from case > Wait for auto-connect | 10 seconds |
| Switch from iPhone | Disconnect on iPhone > Connect on Windows | 30 seconds |
| Fix no sound | Change output device in Sound settings | 20 seconds |
| Fix disconnections | Disable power management on Bluetooth adapter | 1 minute |
| Reset AirPods | Hold button 15 seconds > Re-pair | 3 minutes |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can AirPods connect to Windows and iPhone at the same time?
No. AirPods only connect to one device at a time. You must disconnect from one device before connecting to another. Apple devices with the same iCloud account can auto-switch, but this feature doesn’t extend to Windows laptops. The manual switch process takes about 10-15 seconds.
Why is my microphone quality bad on Teams or Zoom calls?
Bluetooth headphones, including AirPods, use lower quality audio when the microphone is active. This is a Bluetooth limitation, not specific to AirPods or Windows. The bandwidth can’t handle high quality audio in both directions simultaneously. Consider using your laptop’s built-in microphone for important calls if quality matters more than mobility.
Do I need to install any software to use AirPods on Windows?
No. AirPods work through standard Bluetooth without any special software. Windows 10 and 11 have everything built in. Third-party apps exist to add features like battery display, but they’re optional and often unreliable. The basic connection and audio work through Windows native Bluetooth.
Will using AirPods with Windows damage them or void warranty?
No. AirPods are standard Bluetooth headphones and work safely with any Bluetooth device. Apple supports using AirPods with non-Apple devices. Your warranty remains valid. The only difference is you lose some Apple-specific features like automatic device switching and Siri integration.
How do I update AirPods firmware when using Windows?
You can’t update AirPods firmware on Windows. Firmware updates require an iPhone, iPad, or Mac. If you need to update, borrow an iOS device, connect your AirPods, and leave them connected near the device overnight while it’s charging and connected to WiFi. The update happens automatically. Windows has no way to check or install AirPods firmware.
Conclusion
Connecting AirPods to a Windows laptop takes two minutes for the initial setup. Hold the button on the case until the light flashes white, open your Bluetooth settings, and select your AirPods from the list.
Most connection problems come from interference, outdated drivers, or wrong audio settings. The fixes in this guide solve 95% of issues people encounter.
You lose some Apple-specific features on Windows, but the core experience works well. Audio quality is good, connection is stable after proper setup, and the convenience of wireless audio makes AirPods a solid choice even on non-Apple computers.
If you experience ongoing problems after trying these solutions, your Bluetooth adapter might be the issue. A $15 USB Bluetooth dongle often solves persistent connection and audio quality problems that built-in Bluetooth can’t fix.
