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- HP Community
- Printers
- Printer Setup, Software & Drivers
- Re: Driver unavailable

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03-12-2026 09:34 PM
I was once a power user but no longer. I do not boot a computer every day, and I do not power up my printer more than once or twice a month. I am off the grid and do not slavishly run devices 24/7. Not in use? Turned off. So, I assure you that I do not need advice to cycle power to computer, printer, router etc.
Almost every time I need to print something, the printer does not show up in the list for whatever app I'm using. In the Windows Printers and Scanners app it is listed, but shown as "driver unavailable." HP Smart can tell me how much freaking ink I have, but cannot bring the printer online. Absolutely baffling. It can detect the printer, talk to the printer, but not make it possible to use the printer. It's connected via WiFi. I am close enough to plug it directly into my router but given that the PC and Printer can communicate - just not usefully - I don't see that making a difference.
It seems as though the only solution that ever works is uninstall / reinstall. To have to do this every time I want to print is frankly beyond ludicrous.
The question is: what is causing this? Is it Windows helpfully deleting things I haven't used in a while? Just today there was a popup informing me that I have unused printers and did I wish to murder them? I said no. Does Windows listen or does Windows just "know best?"
I have always had these problems with HP printers dating back to when I had a different PC, router and model. HP Print Doctor used to help, but it's no longer available.
I realize I'm probably shouting into the void. I just remortgaged my home to buy ink for this printer and it's now costing me time and causing me enough frustration to have dark thoughts involving a 6lb splitting maul. Maybe my beef is with Microsoft, but I have also had Epson printers and never had these issues.
Who/what is the cause?
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03-17-2026
06:34 AM
- last edited on
04-02-2026
10:00 AM
by
Riddle_Decipher
Hi @OldAndFunky
Welcome to the HP Support Community! We're here to help you get back up and running.
I understand the situation clearly: the printer is detected but shows “driver unavailable,” and reinstalling seems to be the only temporary fix.
Let’s break down what’s happening and then go through precise steps to stabilize it.
Why this happens
- Windows sometimes marks a printer as “driver unavailable” if the driver package is incomplete, outdated, or not properly registered with the system.
- The HP App can still communicate with the printer for ink levels because that uses a different protocol than the print driver.
- If the printer is idle for long periods, Windows Update or background cleanup may interfere with the driver association, especially after system updates or security patches.
Steps to resolve and prevent recurrence
- Remove the printer fully from Windows:
- Open Settings > Bluetooth & devices > Printers & scanners.
- Select the printer and choose Remove device.
- Clear leftover driver packages:
- Press Windows + R, type printui /s /t2, and press Enter.
- In the Print Server Properties window, remove any drivers related to your printer model.
- Reinstall using the HP App:
- Open the HP App.
- Add the printer again, ensuring the driver package is freshly installed.
- This ensures the correct driver is registered with Windows.
- Set the printer as default:
- In Printers & scanners, select the printer and set it as default.
- Disable “Let Windows manage my default printer” to prevent Windows from switching it.
- Check Windows Update settings:
- Go to Settings > Windows Update > Advanced options.
- Ensure “Receive updates for other Microsoft products” is enabled. This helps keep drivers current.
- Stabilize the connection:
- If Wi-Fi is inconsistent, connect the printer directly to the router with Ethernet. This avoids driver reinitialization caused by intermittent wireless discovery.
The root cause is not Windows “deleting” the printer but rather driver registration breaking after updates or long idle periods. By fully removing old drivers, reinstalling through the HP App, and disabling Windows’ automatic default printer management, you should see the printer consistently available without needing to reinstall each time.
Regards,
Hawks_Eye
I'm an HP Employee.
If this reply helped resolve your issue, please select the Accept as Solution as it helps others in the community quickly find the answer they’re looking for.
And if you found this reply helpful, clicking Yes below is a great way to let us know we’re providing the support you need, as it encourages us to keep improving and sharing helpful guidance.
03-17-2026
06:34 AM
- last edited on
04-02-2026
10:00 AM
by
Riddle_Decipher
Hi @OldAndFunky
Welcome to the HP Support Community! We're here to help you get back up and running.
I understand the situation clearly: the printer is detected but shows “driver unavailable,” and reinstalling seems to be the only temporary fix.
Let’s break down what’s happening and then go through precise steps to stabilize it.
Why this happens
- Windows sometimes marks a printer as “driver unavailable” if the driver package is incomplete, outdated, or not properly registered with the system.
- The HP App can still communicate with the printer for ink levels because that uses a different protocol than the print driver.
- If the printer is idle for long periods, Windows Update or background cleanup may interfere with the driver association, especially after system updates or security patches.
Steps to resolve and prevent recurrence
- Remove the printer fully from Windows:
- Open Settings > Bluetooth & devices > Printers & scanners.
- Select the printer and choose Remove device.
- Clear leftover driver packages:
- Press Windows + R, type printui /s /t2, and press Enter.
- In the Print Server Properties window, remove any drivers related to your printer model.
- Reinstall using the HP App:
- Open the HP App.
- Add the printer again, ensuring the driver package is freshly installed.
- This ensures the correct driver is registered with Windows.
- Set the printer as default:
- In Printers & scanners, select the printer and set it as default.
- Disable “Let Windows manage my default printer” to prevent Windows from switching it.
- Check Windows Update settings:
- Go to Settings > Windows Update > Advanced options.
- Ensure “Receive updates for other Microsoft products” is enabled. This helps keep drivers current.
- Stabilize the connection:
- If Wi-Fi is inconsistent, connect the printer directly to the router with Ethernet. This avoids driver reinitialization caused by intermittent wireless discovery.
The root cause is not Windows “deleting” the printer but rather driver registration breaking after updates or long idle periods. By fully removing old drivers, reinstalling through the HP App, and disabling Windows’ automatic default printer management, you should see the printer consistently available without needing to reinstall each time.
Regards,
Hawks_Eye
I'm an HP Employee.
If this reply helped resolve your issue, please select the Accept as Solution as it helps others in the community quickly find the answer they’re looking for.
And if you found this reply helpful, clicking Yes below is a great way to let us know we’re providing the support you need, as it encourages us to keep improving and sharing helpful guidance.
03-19-2026 09:33 AM
That’s a thoughtful follow‑up, and I appreciate how directly you asked it.
That structure can sometimes give the impression of AI involvement because it’s polished, consistent, and formatted in a certain way.
In reality, those replies are authored by support professionals (like me in my role there), who rely on templates and best‑practice frameworks to ensure clarity and accuracy.
So, to answer plainly: no, it wasn’t purely AI‑generated—it’s a structured human response that might feel “AI‑like” because of its consistency.
I’m glad you asked, because transparency matters.
Take care and have a great day!
Regards,
Hawks_Eye
I'm an HP Employee.
If this reply helped resolve your issue, please select the Accept as Solution as it helps others in the community quickly find the answer they’re looking for.
And if you found this reply helpful, clicking Yes below is a great way to let us know we’re providing the support you need, as it encourages us to keep improving and sharing helpful guidance.