The Repair Bench
The Repair Bench · Bench log

How to Fix Lines on a Laptop Screen: Cable, Panel, or GPU

July 18, 2026 · Uncategorized

Lines on a laptop screen look like the end of the world and are usually one of three things: a loose cable, a dying panel, or a graphics problem. The good news is you can tell which one in about five minutes with a test that costs nothing. The bad news is people skip that test, assume the worst, and buy a whole new laptop over a connector that came loose in a backpack.

Do not order parts yet. Run the diagnostics in order first.

How to fix lines on a laptop screen: the two-minute triage

Before anything else, gather three quick facts. They narrow the cause fast.

Keep those three answers in your head. They tell the rest of the story.

Plug in an external monitor (the test that decides everything)

This is the most important step on the page. Connect your laptop to any external screen: a monitor, a TV, whatever has an HDMI or USB-C input. Then look at the external screen.

That one test splits the entire problem in half. On a Windows laptop, press Windows key + P after plugging in and choose Extend or Second screen only so the external display definitely gets a signal.

Fix lines on a laptop screen caused by software first

If the lines showed on the external monitor too, or they appeared right after an update, treat it as software before you open anything. Software fixes are free and reversible.

  1. Restart. A stuck graphics driver sometimes throws artifacts that a reboot clears. Do a full restart, not sleep.
  2. Force a display driver reset. On Windows, press Windows key + Ctrl + Shift + B. The screen blinks and the graphics driver restarts. If the lines vanish, it was a driver hiccup.
  3. Reinstall the graphics driver. Open Device Manager, expand Display adapters, right-click your GPU, and choose Uninstall device. Check “Attempt to remove the driver,” then restart. Windows reinstalls a clean driver, or download the current one from Intel, AMD, or NVIDIA directly.
  4. Boot into Safe Mode. Safe Mode loads a basic display driver. If the lines disappear in Safe Mode, the fault is software or driver, not the panel. If they are still there in Safe Mode, it is hardware.

To reach Safe Mode on Windows 11, go to Settings > System > Recovery, click Restart now under Advanced startup, then choose Troubleshoot > Advanced options > Startup Settings > Restart, and press 4.

The wiggle test: a loose display cable

If the external monitor was clean, and the lines are still there in Safe Mode, you are looking at the laptop’s own display hardware. Start with the cheapest cause: the display cable.

Inside every laptop, a thin ribbon cable (the eDP or older LVDS cable) runs from the motherboard, through the hinge, up to the panel. It carries the video signal. Every time you open and close the lid, that cable flexes. Over years, or after one hard drop, it can loosen or fray at the hinge.

You can test for this without any tools:

A cable that responds to movement is good news. The cable is a cheap part, usually 15 to 40 dollars, and replacing it is far less than a new panel. The catch is that getting to it means removing the screen bezel and hinge cover, which is a real teardown. If you are handy and can find your model’s replacement cable and a teardown video, it is doable. If not, this is a clean, inexpensive job to hand a shop.

Do not force the lid or leave the cable half-seated. A partly connected display cable can short. If you open it up, disconnect the battery first and treat the ribbon connector gently.

When the lines mean a failing panel

If the external monitor was clean, the lines survive Safe Mode, and moving the lid does nothing at all (the lines are rock steady no matter how you flex it), the panel itself is failing. This is the most common outcome after a drop or a hard knock.

A laptop screen is replaced as a whole assembly. Panels run roughly 60 to 300 dollars depending on size, resolution, and whether it is a touchscreen. On many models the panel is a straightforward swap once you have the correct part number, which is printed on a sticker on the back of the panel. On slim and touchscreen laptops the panel is bonded to the glass and the frame, which raises the price and the difficulty.

Never keep pressing on a cracked panel to “see if it spreads.” It will.

When the lines mean the GPU

If the lines showed up on the external monitor too, and reinstalling the driver did not help, the graphics chip itself may be failing. On a laptop the GPU is soldered to the motherboard, so this is the expensive branch. Overheating over years, or a manufacturing fault, can degrade the chip and produce artifacts on every display it drives.

There is no home fix for a failing soldered GPU. A shop can sometimes reflow or replace it, but on most consumer laptops the repair cost approaches the value of the machine. Before you accept that verdict, make sure the driver is genuinely clean and the laptop is not overheating, because a GPU cooking under a dust-clogged heatsink can throw artifacts that a good cleaning resolves.

Costs and parts, so you can decide

Match the cost to the machine. Putting a 250 dollar panel into a five-year-old budget laptop rarely makes sense. Putting a 30 dollar cable into a good machine almost always does.

When to stop and pay a pro

Hand it to a technician if the panel is cracked or the black area is spreading, if the fix needs a full screen or cable teardown you are not confident doing, or if the external monitor test pointed at the GPU. Those jobs need the right part number, a clean workspace, and a steady hand on ribbon connectors. If you have isolated a loose cable and you enjoy a careful teardown, it is one of the more satisfying fixes on the bench. If not, you now know exactly what to tell the shop, which means you will not be upsold a whole new laptop over a cable.

The repair ticket

The whole job is one test and a bit of honesty about what it tells you. Run it before you spend a dollar.

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