No Internet, Secured

How to Fix “No Internet, Secured”

Windows Network Error 📄 Windows 10, Windows 11
⚡ Quick answer

"No Internet, Secured" is a Windows Wi-Fi status message meaning your device is connected to the Wi-Fi network and the connection is encrypted — but there is no internet access beyond the router. Your router is reachable but the router has no internet.

First, check if your internet is working and what your current IP address is:

🔍 Check My IP Address →

What Causes the “No Internet, Secured” Error?

This confusing message means two things simultaneously: "Secured" means the Wi-Fi password is correct and the local connection is encrypted. "No Internet" means the router cannot connect to the internet beyond your home network. Your device is connected to your local network but the path from your router to the internet is broken. Common causes include: your ISP is having an outage, your router lost its WAN connection, your modem is offline, your ISP account has a payment issue, the router got an incorrect IP from the ISP, or Windows network detection is misconfigured.

How to Fix It — 5 Methods

1 Restart your modem and router
  1. Unplug both your modem and router from power
  2. Wait 60 seconds
  3. Plug the modem in first — wait for it to fully connect (all lights stable, ~2 minutes)
  4. Plug the router in — wait for all lights
  5. Check the Wi-Fi status on your device
2 Check for an ISP outage
  1. Check your ISP's app or status page
  2. Search "[your ISP name] outage" on Twitter/X
  3. Visit downdetector.com and search your ISP
  4. If there is a known outage, wait for the ISP to restore service
3 Release and renew your IP address
  1. Press Win + R → type cmd → Enter
  2. Run: ipconfig /release
  3. Then: ipconfig /renew
  4. This forces Windows to request a new IP from the router
4 Reset network settings

Windows Command Prompt (Administrator):

  1. netsh winsock reset
  2. netsh int ip reset
  3. ipconfig /flushdns
  4. Restart your computer
5 Change DNS to Google or Cloudflare

Sometimes "No Internet, Secured" is caused by Windows failing to reach Microsoft's connectivity check server rather than a real outage. Changing DNS fixes this.

  1. Settings → Network → Change adapter options
  2. Right-click Wi-Fi → Properties → IPv4 → Use following DNS
  3. Set to 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4
  4. Click OK — the status may immediately update to "Connected"
🔒
Some errors are caused by ISP blocks or network restrictions
A VPN bypasses them instantly by routing through a different server.

Fixed it? Visit tools.examineip.com to confirm your IP address and connection are working correctly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does "Secured" mean in "No Internet, Secured"?
"Secured" just means your Wi-Fi password is correct and the local wireless connection is encrypted (WPA2/WPA3). It does NOT mean your internet is secure — it only refers to the local radio link between your device and the router.
Why does "No Internet, Secured" appear even when internet is working?
Windows checks internet connectivity by contacting Microsoft's servers (msftconnecttest.com). If that specific server is blocked by your router or DNS, Windows shows "No Internet" even though other sites work fine. Changing DNS to 8.8.8.8 usually fixes this false positive.
Can a VPN cause "No Internet, Secured"?
Yes. A VPN with a kill switch blocks all traffic when the VPN disconnects, causing "No Internet, Secured." Open your VPN app, reconnect, or temporarily disable the kill switch.

Learn More About IP Addresses & Privacy

Other Internet Errors Explained

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Last updated: March 30, 2026 • Report an error

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