How To Fix Webcam Problems
With broadband internet widely available, many PC users are actively using their webcams for video chatting and online meetings. Not only does the increased bandwidth facilitate the use of video over the internet, but improved webcams and better video compression also help a lot. But if your hardware is not working as it should be, a webcam is not much fun. So dealing with webcam problems can be a necessary evil. Webcam problems often simply mean there is no image to be seen, but in other cases, you might actually get an error message or will not be able to select the webcam as the video source in your programs.
In Windows Live Messenger, for example, you might get webcam error 0x8a70013, indicating a problem with the webcam device.
Steps to solve the webcam problems
Check the webcam connection
One of the very first steps is of course to check your webcam connection. Most webcams use the USB port to connect to the PC, so check if your USB cable is properly plugged in. For built-in webcams, these steps of course do not apply. Many new laptops have a built-in webcam. Also, try connecting your webcam directly to your PC instead of through a USB hub (if you are using one).
Enable the webcam
But don’t forget to check if you need to manually activate your webcam. In most cases, the webcam will be automatically activated by software that can use the webcam, but for some computer brands, it is necessary to press a certain key combination to activate the webcam (it will be a Function key, either with Alt or Ctrl or the Fn key, but check the laptop manual for details).
Some known key combinations:
<Fn> + <F9> (Alienware laptop webcams)
<Fn> + <F6> (Packard Bell laptops, MSI laptops, Lenovo laptops)
<Fn> + <F10> (Neo laptops, some Asus laptops)
Check the webcam in the Device Manager
The next thing to do is to check your Windows Device Manager and see if all hardware is recognized and installed properly. Use the Scan for hardware changes in the Action menu to make sure Windows lists all available hardware devices.
It might be that the hardware is recognized as a camera, but the right drivers are not installed. The yellow exclamation mark will indicate a problem.

If the device is not recognized in Windows, it will be listed under Other Devices.

In either case, you can try to update the drivers. Right-click the device, and in the popup menu select Update Driver Software (in Windows 11 – Update driver). Then follow the instructions on screen, but make sure you allow Windows to search the web for updated drivers.
In case no driver for the webcam can be found, you can try a third-party driver-finding program that scans your PC for installed hardware and allows you to install missing drivers.
Reinstall the webcam software
If this fails, the next step would be to uninstall the software that came with your webcam. Use the Add or Remove Programs feature in the Control Panel. If that does not work you can use a third party uninstaller.
After uninstalling the software, restart your PC and then reinstall the webcam software. In most cases, this will solve the problems. Depending on the software, you might need to unplug your webcam during the software installation. For many HP systems, you need to install the CyberLink YouCam software, which can be downloaded from the HP site (for Windows 7 and Windows 8). This program allows you to check the webcam feed to see if it is working.
Check the software settings
If the drivers and webcam software are correctly installed, and you still cannot see any video, there can be a problem with the program settings. Most chat and meeting software have a configuration option to select the video source for the webcam feature. If you have multiple devices that qualify for video, you might need to select your webcam device as the source for the webcam feature in that program.
Some webcams and programs require additional software, although that should be installed with the webcam if things are right. But is does not harm to check if your Java, Flash (discontinued in 2019) and Quicktime software (version 7.6) are installed and up to date. But certainly check your DirectX software, since all video applications, including webcams, use DirectX for video processing. Try downloading the latest DirectX version and install it (Windows XP: DirectX 9.0c – Windows Vista: DirectX 10 (version 11 for Vista with SP2) – Windows 7: DirectX 11 – Windows 8, 8.1: DirectX 11.2 is only available through the Windows Update function – Windows 10: DirectX 11.3 and 12 are included with Windows and updates are only available through Windows update).
Manual focus correction
Lastly, if your webcam’s image is not sharp, check to see if it has a focus ring. A blurry image can sometimes simply mean the webcam is not in focus. Adjusting the focus through the ring can solve that problem.
Adjust video capture quality
Other picture quality problems with webcams can be addressed by changing the video capture properties for the webcam. Most programs that can use a webcam will have the option to access the properties of the video source, which will bring up the video capture properties window.

Do keep in mind that not all settings will be enabled depending on the webcam and the webcam driver installed on your computer. In the example, you can see that some settings are disabled. The example shows the video capture properties for an Acer Crystal Eye webcam.
In Windows 11 the Camera properties look different. Access them by opening Settings from the Start menu, then select Bluetooth & devices in the left-hand pane, click Cameras in the right-hand pane, and then click your camera.

Camera Privacy Settings Causing Webcam Problems
Starting with Windows 8.1 (and Windows 10) there is a privacy setting in Windows that allows (or blocks) access to the camera. If access to the camera is blocked to Apps, your webcam will not work in certain applications.
Here are the steps to ensure that the camera is not blocked in Windows 10:
- From the Start menu, select Settings.
- In the Settings window, click on Privacy.
- Make sure that the setting for Let my apps use my camera is turned On.

Fix Flipped Camera Issues
Having the image from the camera shown as mirrored or upside down has been a long-time problem on some Windows-compatible webcams. In most cases, the right device driver for the camera will fix the issue.
If the camera image is not showing correctly, or changes to an incorrect image when using it to capture video, try the options below to fix it.
Registry tweak to flip camera
Although this solution is not applicable to all webcams, it is good to check if it is applicable in your case.
- Open the Registry Editor using the Windows + R keys and then type
regeditin the Run box. Press Enter or click the OK button. - In the Registry Editor, select the top-level entry (Computer), and then use the File menu Export option to make a backup of the registry.
- Next, locate the following registry entry:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class\
{6BDD1FC6-810F-11D0-BEC7-08002BE2092F}\0000\VIDEOPROCAMP - With the key selected, change entry in the right-hand panel called
HFLIPfrom 0 to 1 (or from 1 to zero, depending on the current value). If the entry does not exist, you can create a new DWORD (32-bit) Value with that name.
Note: Use theVFLIPentry for a vertical flip.
If you cannot find the key, this option probably will not work for your webcam.
Use software settings to flip the camera
If you cannot get the webcam image corrected in Windows itself, using the driver, settings, or registry tweak, you can often use program settings to correct the webcam image.
Do keep in mind that many video chat programs show you the mirrored image of the webcam while people on the other end see the correct image of you. So consider if it is really something that needs to be addressed!
In Zoom you can toggle video mirroring to change the image.
- Click the up arrow in the Video button on the Zoom meeting window.

- Select the Video Settings option in the popup menu.
- In the Video settings pane, unmark the option Mirror my video.

- Close the Video settings pane.
- Close and restart Zoom (close it completely from the Taskbar icon).
If you prefer working with web-based interfaces for online meeting and chat programs like Zoom, Google Meet, and others, installing a browser plugin or extension is the better way to go. For Chrome, there is VideoMirror, which is free and supports camera mirroring. There are others, but make sure to check that the mirror function is available in the free version before you install it.
If you are using your webcam for instant messaging / video chatting with one of the popular chat programs, have a look at ManyCam, which allows you to record your webcam but also allows screen recording, which allows you to record any video stream! Third-party programs like ManyCam act as a virtual webcam and even work to mirror the camera image in Discord, which is not otherwise possible.
Windows 10 Camera Problems
In one of the initial Windows 10 updates, a camera problem was introduced that needed a specific fix. The update causes the camera to stop working in most apps trying to use it. The update pertained to the Windows Frame Server Mode for processing webcam images. Microsoft disabled support for webcams using MJPEG and H264 compression. The way to address this is to disable the Frame Server Mode to allow it to work.
- Open the Registry Editor in Windows.
- Make a backup of the registry using the File -> Export option.
- Navigate to the following registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Media Foundation\Platform - Right-click in the left-hand pane and select New in the popup menu.

- Select DWORD (32-bit) Value and enter the
EnableFrameServerModeas the name. - The value should be zero (0) by default, if not, change it to zero (0) by double-clicking the new key.

- If you are running a 64-bit version of Windows, you need to repeat these steps for the following registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\Microsoft\Windows Media Foundation\Platform - Close the Registry Editor and check if the camera issue is fixed.
A restart of Windows should not be required, but if the fix does not work, restart Windows to make sure the changes take effect.
Realtek Webcam Problems
If your Windows system is using a webcam that is using Realtek components, a specific problem can occur. The Windows service host will report errors that report the camera frame service terminated unexpectedly. The error is caused by a Realtek driver file (RsProvider.dll). The file resides in the path: C:\Program Files\Realtek\RsProviders\RsProvider.dll (unless your system drive is not the C-drive).
You can either delete or rename the RsProviders folder or try a registry option to disable it. Lenovo provides a patch for its affected systems to disable it. The patch removes the following key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Analog\Providers\RsProvider
Before you change the registry, make a backup! If you decide to delete the RsProvider folder, also make a backup first (the better option is to try and rename it first).
Windows 11 Camera Troubleshooter
Microsoft has included a troubleshooter feature in Windows 10 and Windows 11 that can help fix common problems. So, if you experience a camera-related problem in one of these Windows versions, run the Camera Troubleshooter first.
- Open the Settings from the Start menu.
- Select Bluetooth & devices in the left-hand pane.
- Click Cameras in the right-hand pane.
- Select your Camera (USB2.0 HD UVC WebCam in the example).
- Click the Troubleshoot button.

Errors that can be solved this way include the 0xA00F4244 error showing NoCamerasAreAttached. The Camera window will show the message “We can’t find your camera“.

A second frequent error in Windows 10 and Windows 11 relating to the webcam is error 0xA00F429F WindowsShowFailed. The message, in this case, is “Can’t start your camera“.

In most cases, this is an App access issue (permissions), but just run the troubleshooter to see if it can be fixed by Windows automatically.







oh w/e now i see it x[
eny ways i guess i have ta write erything again …
dear kyle …
i hope youll help me at this prob
i have an Eee Pc
and my cam dosent work
the last time it did was in half of my last summer till now Dx ough* i want it to work so bad ):
eny ways i was @ yahoo and last time ive opend it it was in there and i was on cam
there was a box in yahoo opend up and it was sying something a bout the cam i didint understand eny thing it said so ive chose one of the box check thingy and pressd ok coaz there were no wasy i can escape or close that box..
and i think ive disabeld my cam )’:
AND I CANT FIRND IT! nither if its on my computer nor controle panel
so can you please help me i dont know what to do and i want my cam back >< pretty please and thank you .x
i dont see my comment ..):
@Ali – Glad you got it to work again!
@Jay – There are a few things i’d suggest.
First of all, try running “sfc /scannow” at the command prompt (with admin privileges). That will check and correct your Windows system files.
Also check if your system drivers (chipset) are up to date, the PCI to USB controller drivers might benefit from a driver update.
Simply reinstalling your system chipset drivers is also something worth trying.
You have checked that your USb ports are configured for USB 2.0? And you webcam is compatible with the USB 2.0 standard (compared to 1.1.)?
yeserday i reinstalled windows 7 and the webcam driver and it works again perfect! thx anyway
I have a unique problem with a Microsoft “Show” model webcam running on a Vista Operating System.. It works fine until you shut the computer down and after restarting it shows a message ” no camera was found on your computer”.
If I unplug it and immediately plug it into a different USB port it is immediately recognized and works fine… and then repeats the process after the next shutdown.. However, once I have used all 6 USB ports I’m out of luck.. You cannot use one of the USB ports that were previously used with the Webcam for some reason.. Am hoping you know what is causing this..
I have uninstalled software several times trying to fix it, and even have downloaded the software directly from microsoft hoping for an updated version..
Am going crazy trying to figure this one out.. Your expertise would be much appreciated… Thank you…
@Alin – I don’t think that camera is compatible with Windows 7, there is not even a Vista driver for it as far as I can see.
@nisha – Did you add any other USB devices before you started having problems? If so, try uninstalling and unplugging them to see if they cause a conflict.
One other thing that might help is to uninstall the USB Root Hub device in the Device Manager and let Windows reinstall it upon reboot. You need to do them all or find out which one has the webcam attached to it.
I have acer 5920 laptop with built in webcam. My web cam was working properly but for the past few months when i try to open the webcam it displays msg”Camera not found”. The device is not found in the device manager. Sometimes when i restart the laptop, i find the webcam working properly. After some time i find an error msg in the system tray saying” USB device performed some malfunction and windows could not recognise the device”.
is was “failed” not “failer” sry xD
Hi….i have a Delux WebCam B32 and i tried all that u said…but my windows 7 is still searching the driver….and when it’s done….it sais installing device driver failer pls help :D
Hi Kyle,
Thx again for replying!! I’m running XpPro SP2..
Grtz..Eddy.
@TeS – Somehow I still think you are missing the right driver (version) for one of your devices. Maybe not even the webcam driver. You could try running a driver update program to see what they find. You can try Driver Detective and see what it finds. It is commercial software, but you don’t need a license to do a scan and see if any drivers are missing or outdated.
@Eddy – I do not think it is a limitation of XP itself, but let me try it as well and get back to you. Are you running the latest XP service pack?
Hi Kyle,
i start writing this post to tell you that everything is ok with my webcam… but…Well yesterday after all frustating tryes i give up of finding solution for my webcam and what was my suprise today when i turn on the laptop and realise my web cam is instaled ????? All by him self???? Well great i have my webcam back so i instaledd the YouCam software and i run it and it works perfect after i finish installing the drivers it was the Ricoh for memory cards, after installation windows reboot and everything goes back again my webcam gone and gets in USB controler tree installed as “Unknown device”.
Well i realy don’t know what hapen but i did a restore point before reboot the pc and i’m trying now to go back to see if is some of the drivers i installed after.
If you know any other solution please tell me i geting out of solutions already
Thanks for your time and help
Hi again,
I just tested it with two different usb webcams, a “webcam1200” and a “hecules classic link”. The problem stays the same. Since both cams use different drivers I assume that this isn’t the problem. Suppose WinXp can’t handle multiple video streams over USB???
Grtz, Eddy.
Hey Kyle,
I tested “trackercam” and “campanel (trial)” it works nice with one cam but I cannot show two or more. I always get an error that the usb webcam is already in use. The “active led” (on the cam) goes on after the 2nd camera selection but only the first selected cam is shown. Furthermore I have to reboot my PC to get the “active leds” to turn off. Also I tested “WebCamXp”…this is also a nice piece of soft but with the same problems. When selecting a 2nd USB Cam I get the error: “error connecting video source. Is the source already in use? “. A pity there is no warning for this problem on the homepages of the surveillance software makers. Now I have 3 usb webcams and I can’t use them :-(
Thx anyhow for your help!!!
Grtz..Eddy
hi again,
Yes i did uninstall the Unknown device but every time i do that and restart windows he installs as unknown device again i also delete the inf folder so windows don’t install the same but when i do that the unknown device gets an exclamation point on it and i can’t use any drivers from hp website that work
thanks again for you help.
@TeS – Have you tried uninstalling the device with the Unknown Device?
It could be that the initial (re)installation of Vista did not install the device correctly, but now with all updates in place and your network working, device detection and driver installation could work.
Just right-click it in the Device Manager and select uninstall. Then restart Windows.
Hi Kyle,
I hope you can help me becouse i bring to you a realy hard issue that i can’t figure it out.
I have a built-in web cam on a HP Pavillion DV9790, the issue was when i need it to format my laptop, i don’t have the recovery cd’s that i should make when i buy it so i install it using an windows vista CD, after windows instalation i install SP1 and SP2 for Vista and all other updates avaible for this windows until here all ok but when i try to install the device drivers that downloaed from HP web site it installs everything but when i try to install YouCam that is the HP software for webcam it says no web cam installed.
In de device maneger i have everything instaled (with no excalmation points), but on the USB controlers i have 1 line that says Unknown Device with no exclamation point on it and when i try to update the driver it tell’s me that the windows already have the best driver for it.
I realy hpe you can understand and help me out with my issue.
Thanks for your time.
@Johnny boy – Have seen that before yes. Sometimes reinstalling the webcam drivers helps. If that does not work, try using SplitCam or ManyCam.
@padee – See my answer to Johnny boy.
@Eddy – Actually it should be possible to use multiple USB webcams on one Windows PC. In some cases there can be problems if you use the same type of webcams. TrackerCam is one option, but I am sure there are more.
Hi Kyle,
I hope perhaps you can help me…
I wanted to build a little surveillance system for myself and bought 3 HerculesClassicLink USB Wcams. Now I discover that windows (& applications) can only handle one USB cam at the same time?! Is there a way (freeware) to hook up multiple USB webcams to one PC??
Grtz & many Thx,
Eddy.
When ever i talk to my freinds on MSN i also get the little web came symbol that I can share webcam with my friend, but when i click on it this same message pops up.
(We couldn’t start your camera device. Please check that your camera is not currently in use by another program, and then try again.)
I have a sony viao with a built in webcam….would you please help…I used to be able to webcam but just recently I can’t get on because a few of my friends go on meebo.com and my webcam could not work….
i would love any advice to help me…
Hey i hear your really good with web cam problems. When ever i talk to my freinds on MSN i get the little web came simble, but when i click on it this same message pops up.
(We couldn’t start your camera device. Please check that your camera is not currently in use by another program, and then try again.)
Thats the message if you could help that would be great
Thx man
@sabu – I would suggets you at least upgrade to XP service pack 3, which can help solve some USB problems (including USB webcams). Apart from that, try downloading and reinstalling DirectX 9.0c and reinstalling your webcam driver.
Other than that, there are no dependencies.
dear Kyle
as I mentioned my problem on 16th november, I tried with yahoo messenger still the same probelm exist. so please guide me….
thanks
@raghunath – First time I ever hear of such a problem. Things I would suggest is to reinstall Skype and to make sure you are both running the same version of Skype.
If that does not help, you need to look for a possible cause in your network setup (maybe reinstall network driver).
Hope this works.
i am writing it again i dont have webcam. when my friend on his webcam my system get restart in skype . if i split the video also it gets restart . can you help me out plz…