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Rotating your laptop screen can be a lifesaver whether you are trying to read a long document, code, or fix an accidental flip that left your display upside down. While the "classic" keyboard shortcuts are the fastest way, their availability often depends on your hardware and operating system.
Click the and go to System Settings (or System Preferences). Select Displays .
Chromebooks have a built-in shortcut that works across almost all models:
Ctrl + Shift + Refresh (the circular arrow key above the numbers 3 or 4).
Rotates the screen 90 degrees to the left (portrait mode).
MacBooks do not have a default keyboard shortcut for rotation, but you can change it in the system settings:
These shortcuts depend on Intel Graphics Command Center (common on many Windows laptops). If they don't work, your laptop may use different software (AMD, NVIDIA, or no hotkeys enabled). See the "If Shortcuts Don't Work" section below.
| Problem | Likely Fix | | :--- | :--- | | Shortcuts do nothing | Hotkeys disabled (see Method 1) OR your laptop doesn't use Intel graphics. | | Screen won't rotate | Some laptops have a button in Action Center (Wi-Fi/Sound menu). Turn it off. | | Rotation looks stretched | Go to Display Settings → Advanced scaling → Turn off "Let Windows try to fix apps..." |
The primary keyboard shortcut to rotate a laptop screen depends on your operating system and graphics hardware. While Windows once had a universal shortcut, many modern systems now require using the display settings menu.
Rotating your laptop screen can be a lifesaver whether you are trying to read a long document, code, or fix an accidental flip that left your display upside down. While the "classic" keyboard shortcuts are the fastest way, their availability often depends on your hardware and operating system.
Click the and go to System Settings (or System Preferences). Select Displays .
Chromebooks have a built-in shortcut that works across almost all models:
Ctrl + Shift + Refresh (the circular arrow key above the numbers 3 or 4).
Rotates the screen 90 degrees to the left (portrait mode).
MacBooks do not have a default keyboard shortcut for rotation, but you can change it in the system settings:
These shortcuts depend on Intel Graphics Command Center (common on many Windows laptops). If they don't work, your laptop may use different software (AMD, NVIDIA, or no hotkeys enabled). See the "If Shortcuts Don't Work" section below.
| Problem | Likely Fix | | :--- | :--- | | Shortcuts do nothing | Hotkeys disabled (see Method 1) OR your laptop doesn't use Intel graphics. | | Screen won't rotate | Some laptops have a button in Action Center (Wi-Fi/Sound menu). Turn it off. | | Rotation looks stretched | Go to Display Settings → Advanced scaling → Turn off "Let Windows try to fix apps..." |
The primary keyboard shortcut to rotate a laptop screen depends on your operating system and graphics hardware. While Windows once had a universal shortcut, many modern systems now require using the display settings menu.