DeviceHowTo
Google Pixel6 min

How to Fix Wi-Fi Not Working on Google Pixel

Restore internet access with fast, high-success diagnostic steps.

Last verified: February 21, 2026

Android's Wi-Fi troubleshooting follows a standard escalation path: toggle the connection, restart the router, forget and rejoin the network, and finally reset network settings as a last resort. The less obvious fix that resolves many Android-specific connection issues is switching the network's IP settings from DHCP to Static in the advanced Wi-Fi options, assigning the device a fixed IP outside the router's DHCP range to avoid address conflicts. Android also supports Wi-Fi calling fallback and has separate settings for switching networks automatically when signal drops, which can interfere with stable connections on networks with overlapping SSIDs.

Quick Steps

Follow in order for the fastest result.

  1. 1Toggle Wi-Fi off, wait 10 seconds, and turn it back on from Quick Settings.
  2. 2Restart your router and modem: unplug from power for 30 seconds, reconnect, and wait 2 minutes for it to fully restart.
  3. 3Forget the Wi-Fi network and reconnect from scratch: tap the network name, select Forget, then re-enter the password.

Still Not Working?

Try these if the steps above didn't help.

Verify the Fix

Confirm everything is fully working before closing this guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my Google Pixel keep disconnecting from Wi-Fi?
Android often drops Wi-Fi when the screen is off to save battery. Go to Settings > Connections > Wi-Fi > Advanced > Wi-Fi power saving mode and turn it off.
How do I know if the Wi-Fi problem is my device or my router?
Test another device on the same network. If that device also has no internet, the problem is the router or ISP. If the other device works fine, the problem is your specific device. This single test narrows the diagnosis immediately.
Why does my Google Pixel show connected to Wi-Fi but has no internet?
Connected but no internet means your device reached the router but the router can't reach the internet, or there's a DNS/IP conflict. Restart the router first. If that doesn't help, follow the Fix Wi-Fi Connected but No Internet guide for your device.
Why can my Google Pixel see Wi-Fi networks but not connect to mine?
This typically indicates a password mismatch, a MAC address filter on the router blocking the device, or the router assigning all available DHCP leases. Try forgetting the network and reconnecting with the exact password. If you have a MAC filter enabled on the router, add your device's MAC address to the allowed list.

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