If your computer used to start up in seconds and now takes long enough to brew a cup of coffee, you're not alone — and it's probably not broken. Most "slow computer" problems have simple causes that are easy to fix, even if you've never opened a settings menu before.

Here are the five most common reasons computers slow down, written in plain English, with step-by-step instructions anyone can follow.

1. Too Many Programs Starting Automatically

Every time your computer turns on, a handful of programs try to start with it. Over the years, this list grows — and your computer gets slower and slower.

How to fix it (Windows 10/11):

  1. Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc on your keyboard. This opens Task Manager.
  2. Click the Startup tab at the top.
  3. Look at the list. Anything with "High" startup impact is slowing you down.
  4. Right-click programs you don't need immediately (like Spotify, Adobe, or games) and select Disable.
  5. Don't disable your antivirus or anything from Microsoft.

💡 SilverLink Tip: We see this on nearly every slow computer we fix. Disabling just 3-4 startup programs often cuts boot time in half.

2. Your Hard Drive Is Almost Full

Computers need breathing room. When your hard drive gets above 85% full, everything slows to a crawl because Windows has nowhere to store temporary files.

How to check:

  1. Open File Explorer (the folder icon on your taskbar).
  2. Click This PC on the left.
  3. Look under the C: drive. If the bar is red or close to full, that's your problem.

Quick ways to free space:

  • Empty your Recycle Bin (right-click it, choose Empty).
  • Run Disk Cleanup: Search for it in the Start menu, select your C: drive, and check the boxes for Temporary files and Recycle Bin.
  • Delete old downloads you don't need.
  • Move photos to a USB drive or cloud storage.

3. Too Many Browser Tabs Open

Every tab you open uses a little bit of your computer's memory. Twenty tabs later, your computer is gasping for air. Chrome and Edge are especially hungry.

The fix:

  • Close tabs you aren't using. Bookmark anything you want to save for later.
  • Consider using Microsoft Edge instead of Chrome — it uses less memory and works almost identically.
  • On Chrome, look for the little speaker icon on tabs playing sound or video — those use the most resources.

4. Your Computer Needs Updates

Those "Update and Restart" notifications aren't just annoying — they're important. Updates fix bugs, close security holes, and often include performance improvements.

How to update:

  1. Click the Start button → Settings (the gear icon).
  2. Click Windows Update (or Update & Security on Windows 10).
  3. Click Check for updates and install anything it finds.
  4. Restart your computer when it asks — updates don't fully apply until you do.

💡 SilverLink Tip: Set updates to run automatically overnight. Go to Windows Update → Advanced options → Turn on "Get me up to date."

5. Malware or Fake "Cleaner" Software

If pop-ups are telling you your computer has 5,000 errors, that's usually a scam — and those fake "PC cleaners" often make your computer slower, not faster.

What to do:

  • Never click pop-up warnings that aren't from Windows itself.
  • Uninstall suspicious programs: Start → Settings → Apps → sort by date installed, and remove anything you don't recognize.
  • Run a scan with Windows Security (it comes free with Windows).

Still Slow After All That?

Sometimes a computer is slow because the hardware itself is aging — especially if it still has a traditional spinning hard drive instead of a solid-state drive (SSD). Upgrading to an SSD can make a 10-year-old computer feel brand new, and it's much cheaper than buying a new one.

Need Help? We're Local.

If these steps feel overwhelming, or your computer is still slow, SilverLink offers patient, senior-friendly tech support across the Oklahoma City metro. No jargon, no rushing.

Schedule a Free 10-Minute Call

Or call us at (405) 877-2223