Driver — How To Rollback

is a Windows feature that allows you to uninstall the current driver for a hardware device and automatically reinstall the previous version. This is an essential troubleshooting step when a new driver update causes crashes, blue screens (BSOD), hardware malfunctions, or performance drops.

After rolling back, Windows may reinstall the problematic driver automatically. To prevent this: how to rollback driver

Find the device whose driver you want to roll back. Common categories: is a Windows feature that allows you to

Rolling back a device driver is a built-in Windows feature that allows you to uninstall a current, problematic driver and automatically reinstall the version previously used. This is often the quickest way to resolve system crashes, hardware malfunctions, or performance issues—like a graphics card causing lag in games—after a recent update. How to Roll Back a Driver in Windows 10 and 11 To prevent this: Find the device whose driver

Possible reasons and solutions:

If the Roll Back Driver button is grayed out or not available, you can try uninstalling the current driver and then reinstalling a previous version: