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Plugged In Not Charging

Dell Laptop

Severity: Moderate

What Does This Error Mean?

Plugged In, Not Charging usually means the battery has reached an aged-cell threshold, the charger is not delivering enough power, or the BIOS has paused charging. Start by checking the charger and battery health.

Affected Models

  • Dell Inspiron
  • Dell Latitude
  • Dell XPS
  • Dell Vostro
  • Dell Precision

Common Causes

  • Worn or aged battery near end of life
  • Wrong wattage charger or non-Dell charger detected as underpowered
  • Damaged charging port or DC jack
  • BIOS Battery Health setting paused charging at a threshold
  • Failed AC adapter

How to Fix It

  1. Check the charger.

    Make sure you are using a Dell-branded charger of the correct wattage. Look for the LED on the charger brick — if it is off, the charger has failed. Try a different known-good Dell charger if available.

  2. Check Dell BIOS battery settings.

    Reboot and tap F2 to enter BIOS. Look for Battery Health, Battery Information, or Primary Battery Charge Configuration. Some Dell laptops let you set a charge threshold (e.g. stop at 80%) — adjust if needed.

  3. Run the battery health check.

    Open Dell Power Manager (or Dell Command Update) in Windows. If the battery is reported as Poor or Replace, the battery cells are worn and need replacement. Most Dell laptops have user-replaceable batteries.

  4. Inspect the charging port.

    Look at the DC jack or USB-C port for bent pins, debris, or damage. Clean carefully with compressed air. A loose or wobbly port indicates physical damage requiring repair.

When to Call a Professional

If a known-good Dell charger and a fresh battery do not resolve charging, the charging circuit on the motherboard has failed. Replacement requires a technician.

Frequently Asked Questions