Taskbar not working on Windows 11? 7 fixes that work
✓ Reviewed & updated June 2026A taskbar that won't respond — clicks do nothing, icons have vanished, or the whole bar is frozen — makes Windows 11 feel unusable. You can't open apps, check the time, or reach the system tray. It's a common glitch though, and like the Start menu, it almost always comes down to Windows Explorer. Most people fix it in seconds with the first step.
Work through these in order. Fix 1 resolves the majority of cases.
Quick checklist
- Restart Windows Explorer
- Restart your PC
- Install Windows updates
- Run SFC and DISM scans
- Re-register the taskbar with PowerShell
- Clear the icon cache
- Test with a new user account
Why the taskbar stops working
The taskbar is drawn by Windows Explorer, so an Explorer hiccup freezes it. Other causes are a pending update or bug, corrupted system files, a broken icon cache, or a damaged user profile. The fixes below clear each.
The 7 fixes
Restart Windows Explorer
The single fastest fix — because the taskbar is part of Windows Explorer, restarting it brings the bar back to life.
- Press
Ctrl + Shift + Escto open Task Manager. - In Processes, find Windows Explorer.
- Click it → Restart task. The screen will flash briefly — that's normal.
- Check whether the taskbar responds now.
Restart your PC
If restarting Explorer didn't hold, a full reboot clears deeper glitches.
- With the taskbar frozen, press
Ctrl + Alt + Delete→ power icon (bottom-right) → Restart.
Install Windows updates
Many taskbar bugs are caused by a specific Windows 11 build and fixed in the next update.
- Press
Windows + Ito open Settings. - Go to Windows Update → Check for updates, install everything, and restart.
Run SFC and DISM scans
Corrupted system files can break the taskbar. These tools repair them.
- Open Task Manager → Run new task → type
cmd, tick Create this task with administrative privileges → OK. - Run
sfc /scannow, thenDISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth. - Restart and test.
Re-register the taskbar with PowerShell
If the taskbar's component is broken, re-registering it rebuilds it from Windows' own files.
- Open Task Manager → Run new task → type
powershell, tick the admin box → OK. - Paste this and press Enter:
Get-AppxPackage -AllUsers Microsoft.Windows.ShellExperienceHost | Foreach {Add-AppxPackage -DisableDevelopmentMode -Register "$($_.InstallLocation)\AppXManifest.xml"} - Restart your PC and test.
Clear the icon cache
If taskbar icons are missing or blank, a corrupted icon cache is usually to blame.
- Open Task Manager → Run new task → type
cmdwith admin privileges → OK. - Run these lines one at a time:
ie4uinit.exe -showtaskkill /IM explorer.exe /Fdel /A /Q "%localappdata%\IconCache.db"start explorer.exe - The icons rebuild automatically.
Test with a new user account
If nothing works, a corrupted profile is likely. A fresh account confirms it and gives you a working taskbar.
- Go to Settings → Accounts → Other users → Add account and create a new local user.
- Sign in and test. If the taskbar works there, your old profile is the problem — move your files to the new account.
Frequently asked questions
What's the quickest fix for a frozen taskbar?
Restarting Windows Explorer (fix 1). Since the taskbar is drawn by Explorer, restarting it revives the bar in seconds for most people.
My Start menu is broken too. Are they linked?
Yes. The taskbar, Start menu and search all run on Windows Explorer, so they often fail and recover together. See our Start menu not opening guide for more.
Only my taskbar icons are missing. Which fix?
That's the icon cache. Clearing it (fix 6) rebuilds the icons without affecting your apps or settings.
The taskbar broke after a Windows update. Will another update fix it?
Often, yes. Taskbar bugs are frequently tied to a specific build and fixed in the next update, so checking for updates (fix 3) is worth doing early.
Start menu not opening either? See our guide to the Start menu not opening on Windows 11. Still stuck here? Send us the details.
Send us the details →