A monitor that goes black for a few seconds is almost always one of three things: a loose or failing video cable, a refresh-rate or power-saving setting, or a graphics driver hiccup. The good news is that the most common cause – the cable – is also the easiest and cheapest to fix. Let us work through it calmly, from the most likely cause to the least, so you can find yours without replacing anything you do not need to.
That brief black-out, where the screen drops to nothing and then snaps back a second or two later, is your monitor losing and re-detecting the signal. Once you understand that, the list of suspects gets short. Do not worry – you will not need to be technical for any of this.
1. Check the cable first (the usual culprit)
Nine times out of ten, this is it. A slightly loose HDMI or DisplayPort cable, or one that is starting to fail, drops the signal intermittently. Power the monitor off, firmly unplug the cable at both ends, and plug it back in until it clicks. If the black-outs continue, the cable itself may be faulty – swap in a different one if you have it. Cables are cheap and they fail far more often than people expect.
2. Try a different port or cable type
If reseating did not help, move the cable to a different port on your graphics card or monitor. A single failing port can cause exactly this symptom. If your monitor and PC both support more than one connection type, try switching from HDMI to DisplayPort (or vice versa) – it is a quick way to rule out a bad port or a finicky cable standard.
3. Fix a refresh-rate mismatch
If your PC is set to a refresh rate your monitor or cable cannot reliably handle, the display can blank out as it struggles to keep the signal. In Windows, go to Settings, System, Display, Advanced display, and make sure the refresh rate matches what your monitor actually supports. If you are not sure what number to choose, our guide on a good refresh rate for gaming explains the common options. Setting it one step lower temporarily is a good test – if the black-outs stop, you have found it.

4. Update or roll back your graphics driver
A buggy or outdated graphics driver is a frequent cause of random blanking. Update to the latest driver from your GPU maker. If the problem started right after a driver update, the opposite can also be true – rolling back to the previous version can fix it. Either way, a clean driver install often clears the issue.
5. Check power-saving and sleep settings
Sometimes the screen is simply being told to sleep. Aggressive power-saving settings, a screensaver, or a monitor with its own “eco” mode can blank the display during quiet moments. In Windows power settings, set the screen to turn off after a longer period, and check your monitor’s on-screen menu for any power-saving option that might be too eager.
6. Watch your GPU temperature
If the black-outs happen mainly during games or heavy graphics work, an overheating graphics card may be briefly cutting out to protect itself. It is worth checking – our guide on how to check your GPU temperature walks you through it, and normal GPU temperature tells you what is healthy. If it is running hot, improving airflow and clearing dust usually solves it.

7. Rule out the monitor or its power
If nothing above helps, the monitor itself or its power supply may be failing. Try the monitor on a different computer, or a different monitor on your PC, to narrow it down. A failing internal power board often shows up as exactly this kind of intermittent black-out, and at that point repair or replacement is the answer.
Quick reference: cause and fix
| Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|
| Loose or failing cable | Reseat firmly or replace the cable |
| Bad port | Switch to another port or connection type |
| Refresh-rate mismatch | Set the correct refresh rate in Windows |
| Graphics driver | Update, or roll back if it started after an update |
| Power saving / sleep | Adjust Windows and monitor power settings |
| Overheating GPU | Improve cooling, clear dust |
| Failing monitor / PSU | Test with another monitor or PC; repair or replace |
Black for a few seconds vs. a permanent black screen
It is worth separating two different problems, because they have very different fixes. A screen that blanks for a second or two and then recovers is a signal drop – the cable, port, refresh-rate, and driver checks above are exactly where to focus. A screen that goes black and stays black, with no signal at all, is a more serious fault: a dead cable, a failed graphics output, a power problem, or a monitor that has simply given up. If yours is the permanent kind, skip ahead to testing with another cable, another port, and ideally another monitor or PC to pin down which component has failed.
One more clue: watch when it happens
Pay close attention to the pattern, because it points straight at the culprit. If the black-out only happens on one HDMI input, that input or its cable is the suspect. If it only happens inside one game or app, the cause is far more likely a graphics driver or that program’s full-screen handling than the monitor itself – try running it in borderless windowed mode as a quick test. And if it happens at random across everything, lean toward the cable and driver checks first. Narrowing down the when saves you from replacing the wrong thing.
Frequently asked questions
Why does my monitor go black for a second while gaming?
Usually a cable or refresh-rate issue under load, or a GPU briefly overheating. Reseat the cable, confirm the refresh rate, and check your graphics card temperature.
Does the screen going black damage my monitor?
No. The brief black-out itself is harmless – it is the monitor losing signal. It is a symptom to fix, not damage being done.
My whole screen goes black but the PC stays on – why?
That points to the display path: cable, port, refresh rate, or driver. The computer is fine; the video signal is dropping.
When should I replace the monitor?
Only after you have ruled out the cable, port, settings, and driver, and confirmed the issue follows the monitor onto another computer.
Start at the top of this list and stop when the black-outs do. For the vast majority of people, a fresh cable or the right refresh-rate setting is all it takes – no new monitor required.
Daniel spent years in IT support before turning to writing. He specialises in clear, no-nonsense how-to guides and troubleshooting for Windows, macOS, and the software people rely on every day.
