Is your Surface Laptop not showing the battery percentage in the taskbar? Don’t panic — it’s a common issue and usually easy to fix! Whether the battery icon disappeared after an update or the percentage simply isn’t visible, this guide walks you through quick and effective solutions to restore it in minutes.
Follow these simple steps to get your battery percentage back where it belongs! 💻⚡
Right-click anywhere on your taskbar, go into Taskbar settings, scroll down to System tray icons and see if the battery toggle got turned off. If it did, just flip it back on and you should see it reappear straight away.
If it’s already turned on but the icon still isn’t showing, don’t panic just yet. Look for a small upward arrow on the right side of your taskbar near the clock. Click that and see if your battery icon has just been hiding in there. If it has, you can drag it back out onto the main taskbar where it belongs.
If that’s not it either, a quick restart of Windows Explorer often does the trick. Right-click your Start button, open Task Manager, find Windows Explorer in the list, right-click it and hit Restart.
If required, open Command Prompt as Administrator and copy-paste the following command followed by pressing the Enter key:
When you send your Surface in for a damaged screen, don’t expect to get your own device back with a shiny new screen fitted. What Microsoft actually does is take your device, assess it, and then send you back a refurbished unit instead. That’s just how they handle repairs — it’s their standard process across the board.
Now, what happens next really depends on how the damage occurred in the first place.
If you dropped it or cracked it by accident, unfortunately the standard one-year warranty won’t help you here. Accidental damage isn’t covered, so you’ll be looking at paying an out-of-warranty service fee, which can get pretty pricey depending on which Surface model you have.
If you paid for Microsoft Complete when you bought your device, you’re in a better spot. That’s Microsoft’s optional protection plan that actually does cover accidental damage. You’d still pay a deductible, but it’s a lot more manageable than the full out-of-warranty cost, and you’d still get a refurbished replacement in return.
If the screen cracked on its own without any drops or impacts, it’s worth contacting Microsoft and pushing back. The Surface Laptop 3 is a good example — Microsoft admitted there was a manufacturing defect causing screens to crack spontaneously and offered free repairs for it. So if something similar is happening to your device, it’s worth making some noise about it.
And if you’re technically inclined, self-repair is also on the table. Microsoft does sell replacement parts for some Surface models, but just know it’s not a simple job — it takes patience, the right tools, and a steady hand.
The big takeaway here is — back up everything before you send your device in. Microsoft will not recover your data for you, and since you’re getting a different unit back, whatever was on your original device is gone.
The Surface Laptop 3 situation was unique because Microsoft actually acknowledged it as a manufacturing defect.
So basically, the Surface Laptop 3 had a known issue where the screen would just crack on its own — no drops, no impacts, nothing. Microsoft looked into it and admitted that a tiny hard particle could get trapped and cause a hairline fracture in the glass that seemed to appear out of nowhere. That’s what made this situation different from a typical “I dropped my laptop” scenario.
Because Microsoft officially acknowledged it as their fault, they stepped up and offered free repairs for both the 13.5-inch and 15-inch versions of the Laptop 3. They even went a step further — if you had already paid out of your own pocket to fix it before the program was announced, you could reach out to Microsoft Support and potentially get reimbursed. That was a pretty rare move from them.
One thing worth noting is that the cracking seemed to mostly affect the aluminum models. The versions with the Alcantara fabric covering didn’t really show the same problem.
Now here’s where it gets frustrating — other Surface owners dealing with similar spontaneous cracking on models like the Laptop 4, Laptop 5, or Surface Go haven’t been so lucky. Microsoft hasn’t come out and acknowledged a defect on those devices, so those owners are essentially stuck paying expensive out-of-warranty fees even if the crack appeared completely on its own. A lot of people feel that the underlying design issue didn’t just magically stop with the Laptop 3, but Microsoft has only ever officially owned the problem for that one model.
Open Device Manager. In Start Search type Device Manager and hit the Enter key to open.
Expand Batteries
You should see:
Microsoft AC Adapter
Microsoft ACPI Compliant Control Method Battery
If Batteries section is missing → driver corruption
If Surface Battery is missing → embedded controller issue
If both are present → icon service problem
Right-click Microsoft AC Adapter → Uninstall device
Right-click Microsoft Surface Battery → Uninstall device
Restart the Surface
=====
Shut down completely
Hold Power button for 20 seconds
Release
Wait 10 seconds
Turn it back on
If that doesn’t work:
Shut down
Hold Power + Volume Up together for 15 seconds
Release
Wait 10 seconds
Start normally
Go to Settings → Personalization → Taskbar
Click Other system tray icons
Make sure Power is ON
=====
Open Command Prompt as Admin and copy-paste:
powercfg /restoredefaultschemes
In Start Search type Gpedit.msc and hit the Enter key to open Group Policy Editor.
Under User Configuration > Administrative Templates > Start Menu and Taskbar > Scroll down to Remove the battery meter > Double click on it > Set the policy to either Not configured or, Disabled. Click Apply/OK. Reboot.
You must be logged in to post a comment.