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Likely fix

Fix: One device cannot connect to WiFi

When only one device cannot connect, the usual causes are a saved bad password, incompatible security mode, blocked device, parental controls, or broken network settings.

Quick answer

Forget the WiFi network on that device, restart it, reconnect carefully, and check whether the device is blocked in the router app or parental controls.

Important warning

If the router uses WPA3-only security, older phones, laptops, printers, and smart devices may fail to connect.

Try this

  1. 1 Forget the WiFi network on that device.
  2. 2 Restart the device.
  3. 3 Reconnect and carefully enter the WiFi password.
  4. 4 Check whether the device is blocked in the router app or parental controls.
  5. 5 Check whether the router uses WPA3-only security.
  6. 6 Update the device software.
  7. 7 Reset network settings on the device if it still cannot connect.

Common causes

Saved password or network profile is bad.

Device is blocked by router settings.

Parental controls or access schedules are active.

Router security mode is incompatible.

Device software or WiFi adapter is outdated.

What to check next

  • Check whether the device appears as blocked in the router app.
  • Check whether parental controls are active.
  • Check whether another device can connect with the same password.
  • Check whether the router is using WPA3-only security.
  • Check whether the device can connect to a phone hotspot.

FAQ

Why can only one device not connect to WiFi?

That device may have a bad saved network, be blocked by the router, be affected by parental controls, or not support the router's security settings.

Can a router block one device?

Yes. Router apps can block devices through access control, parental controls, schedules, or security settings.

Can an old device fail to connect to a new router?

Yes. Older devices may not support newer WiFi bands or WPA3-only security.

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