Solved Windows 11 Laptop Taking 4 Minutes to Connect to Wireless Network


Thanks for the additional info JeFtFotF. Do you happen to know *which* specific drivers got reverted in your restoration of the "Intel driver update"? Did that update include the driver for the wifi adapter? Motherboard? The Dell Inspiron 15 3511 laptop that I was helping my neighbor with has a *RealTek* wifi adapter (not sure of the exact model, as I don't have access to the computer at the moment). What brand of wifi adapter is in your system?

Tom
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11 Pro 25H2
    Computer type
    Laptop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 3 Type 21MN-005QUS
    CPU
    Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz
    Motherboard
    ???
    Memory
    32GB
    Graphics Card(s)
    None (motherboard graphics)
    Sound Card
    None (motherboard sound)
    Monitor(s) Displays
    HP Pavilion 25bw
    Screen Resolution
    1920 x 1080
    Hard Drives
    SK Hynix HFS001TEJ9X162N 1TB
    PSU
    Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
    Case
    Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
    Cooling
    Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
    Keyboard
    Dell wired keyboard
    Mouse
    HP wired mouse
    Internet Speed
    Variable (BrightSpeed 1GB fiber)
    Browser
    Chrome
    Antivirus
    AVAST Basic (free)
I noticed a similar issue on our Dell XPS 8960 that started about a week ago, although the delay was about 2 minutes vs the previous 5 seconds or less. I did a search and found this thread, which is one of the most detailed and well written that I have seen in a long time.
I checked a few things and chose to uninstall the Intel driver update 24.40.0 that was released on 28 Apr, and reinstalled 24.30.1 via the Intel Driver & Support Assistant. Afterward, I shut the computer down for about 10 minutes, and when I restarted, the WiFi connected almost instantaneously again.
Thank you for the inspiration that grew from the thorough discussion, testing, and reporting.
Interesting... I'm running 24.40.0.4 now, after all of my trials and tribulations (and Windows reset). Moreover, simply changing drivers did not solve my problem. I even went to the trouble of ensuring a "clean" driver installation by deleting all the wifi adapter drivers from Windows so it couldn't automatically install one when I uninstalled a driver. It made no difference to my delay.

My delay issues began with about a 2 minute delay and grew over the course of a week or so to 4+ minutes.

It sounds like your problem might be different from mine.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11
    Computer type
    Laptop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Dell
    CPU
    Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1.80GHz, 199
    Motherboard
    BaseBoard Manufacturer Dell Inc. BaseBoard Product 08YRWT BaseBoard Version A00
    Memory
    Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
That would not be surprising to me either. Beyond using a different, but similar, system, some of the detailed symptoms are different. And I do not know the inner workings of these drivers.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11 Pro 25H2
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Dell XPS 8960
    CPU
    13th Gen Intel Core i7-13700 (2.1 to 5.1 GHz)
    Memory
    32GB RAM
    Graphics Card(s)
    NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti (8 GB), Intel UHD Graphics 770 (2 GB)
    Sound Card
    NVIDIA High Definition Audio, Realtek Audio
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell SE2722HX
    Screen Resolution
    1920 x 1080
    Hard Drives
    512GB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD + 2TB 7200RPM 3.5 SATA HDD
Tom, I will look for answers to your questions and reply here.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11 Pro 25H2
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Dell XPS 8960
    CPU
    13th Gen Intel Core i7-13700 (2.1 to 5.1 GHz)
    Memory
    32GB RAM
    Graphics Card(s)
    NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti (8 GB), Intel UHD Graphics 770 (2 GB)
    Sound Card
    NVIDIA High Definition Audio, Realtek Audio
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell SE2722HX
    Screen Resolution
    1920 x 1080
    Hard Drives
    512GB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD + 2TB 7200RPM 3.5 SATA HDD
sartor,

Our Dell XPS 8960 has an Intel Killer Wi-Fi 6E AX1675 adapter. The current Wi-Fi driver version is 23.160.0.4, dated 21 Jul 2025, per Device Manager and Intel’s Driver & Support Assistant. The driver I uninstalled was version 24.40.0.3, dated 28 Apr 2026. Both versions included drivers for the Wi-Fi adapter (and Intel Bluetooth) per the webpages and release notes. Neither the webpages nor the notes mention the motherboard.

I was not as accurate as I should have been in my previous statement about “…reinstalled 24.30.1…” The download file for that version has that number in the filename but that particular ID was for the Intel Bluetooth component of that update, not the Wi-Fi component.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11 Pro 25H2
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Dell XPS 8960
    CPU
    13th Gen Intel Core i7-13700 (2.1 to 5.1 GHz)
    Memory
    32GB RAM
    Graphics Card(s)
    NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti (8 GB), Intel UHD Graphics 770 (2 GB)
    Sound Card
    NVIDIA High Definition Audio, Realtek Audio
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell SE2722HX
    Screen Resolution
    1920 x 1080
    Hard Drives
    512GB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD + 2TB 7200RPM 3.5 SATA HDD
Thanks for the follow-up JeFtFotF...glad you got your's working well again. I'm guessing that I might have a different issue with my neighbor's computer, given that she's got a RealTek wifi adapter, and not Intel. I'm going to try disabling the "wifi direct" service, which I believe is for the cellphone connection to the printer, and see if that might be interfering. I'll also try checking the "Event viewer" that Slavic suggested, to see if there are any clues there. And I want to double-check to see if the WLAN AutoConfig service indicates "running" even during the 4-minute delay period. I'll report back once I'm able to check those things. Still hoping to find a solution short of a full Windows Reset.

Tom
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11 Pro 25H2
    Computer type
    Laptop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 3 Type 21MN-005QUS
    CPU
    Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz
    Motherboard
    ???
    Memory
    32GB
    Graphics Card(s)
    None (motherboard graphics)
    Sound Card
    None (motherboard sound)
    Monitor(s) Displays
    HP Pavilion 25bw
    Screen Resolution
    1920 x 1080
    Hard Drives
    SK Hynix HFS001TEJ9X162N 1TB
    PSU
    Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
    Case
    Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
    Cooling
    Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
    Keyboard
    Dell wired keyboard
    Mouse
    HP wired mouse
    Internet Speed
    Variable (BrightSpeed 1GB fiber)
    Browser
    Chrome
    Antivirus
    AVAST Basic (free)
This issue is driving me nuts on a Vostro P106F but I have more info. If you watch task manager at boot, is Background Task Host hitting "Suspended" status immediately after the desktop displays, and staying suspended right until you can use WiFi functions? This is what's happening for me as of this week... It seems like this isn't actually a WiFi bug. Instead, it something that is throwing the Background Task Host into suspended status before it does the background tasks of invoking the services waiting behind it -- including those related to the network stack.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11
    Computer type
    Laptop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Dell
I had a very similar “Windows 11 takes minutes before Wi-Fi becomes usable / login feels stuck” issue and found a cause I had not seen mentioned in the usual Wi-Fi-driver/router/network-reset advice.

In my case the Wi-Fi adapter and router were not the root problem. Once Windows actually released the logon/session path, WLAN connected almost immediately.

Symptoms:
- After reboot, Wi-Fi was not usable at the sign-in screen.
- After entering PIN/password, Windows sat on the spinning dots / pre-desktop phase for about 2-3 minutes.
- Once the desktop appeared, Wi-Fi connected almost immediately.
- Network resets, Intel Wi-Fi mode changes, startup cleanup, and testing with a local account did not fix it.

What finally identified it:
Winlogon logs showed authentication succeeded quickly, but Winlogon event 12 / desktop release was delayed by about 168 seconds.

Services diagnostics showed `camsvc` (`Capability Access Manager Service`) was requested at the same time and only reported fully running right before Winlogon resumed.

The culprit was:

C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\CapabilityAccessManager\CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal

That file had grown to about 58 GiB. After stopping `camsvc`, deleting only:

C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\CapabilityAccessManager\CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal
C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\CapabilityAccessManager\CapabilityAccessManager.db-shm

and then starting `camsvc` again, the next reboot was fixed.

Before cleanup:
- Auth success -> desktop release: ~168 seconds
- WLAN connected only after that

After cleanup:
- Auth success -> desktop release: ~0.7 seconds
- WLAN AutoConfig started before authentication
- Wi-Fi connected immediately afterward

So if someone has the same “Wi-Fi takes minutes after reboot” or “login spins for minutes before desktop” pattern, it may be worth checking the size of:

C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\CapabilityAccessManager\CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal

Notes:
- Do not permanently disable `camsvc`.
- I did not delete the main `CapabilityAccessManager.db`.
- The folder is protected; normal admin access may not be enough. I used a temporary SYSTEM scheduled task to do the cleanup.
- This may not be every delayed-Wi-Fi case, but it exactly matched mine.


I also made a small PowerShell helper for my own machine. I’m not posting it as “random script from the internet, just run this”, but the shape of it was:

- Run from an elevated PowerShell window.
- Create a temporary scheduled task running as SYSTEM, because the folder is SYSTEM-owned.
- Stop `camsvc`.
- Delete only `CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal` and `CapabilityAccessManager.db-shm`.
- Start `camsvc` again.
- Log the before/after file sizes.
- Delete the temporary scheduled task.

The important part is not the script itself, but the diagnostic: check whether `CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal` is huge and whether `camsvc` startup lines up with the Winlogon delay.

If anyone wants the exact PowerShell helper I used, I can share it, but I’d strongly suggest reading it first and only running it elevated if you understand what it does. I don't want any trouble. I'm here to help, after 2 days of pain trying to fix this and nothing I found on the internet helped.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11
    Computer type
    Laptop
    Manufacturer/Model
    ASUS Vivobook K5504VA / S5504VA
I had a problem with my Ultrabook wireless being slow and frequently disconnecting. Updating the wireless driver resolved the issue.
 

My Computers

System One System Two

  • OS
    Windows 11 Education For 25H2
    Computer type
    Laptop
    Manufacturer/Model
    HP ZBook G2
    CPU
    Intel® Core i7 5500u
    Motherboard
    HP
    Memory
    8 GB
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Family Graphics 5500 AMD Firepro 4150M
    Sound Card
    Realtek High Audio
    Hard Drives
    1 TB SSD
    Mouse
    HP USB Mouse
    Antivirus
    Windows Defender
  • Operating System
    Windows 11 Pro For Workstations 25H2
    Computer type
    Laptop
    Manufacturer/Model
    HP Zbook G4
    CPU
    Xeon 1535m v6
    Motherboard
    HP
    Memory
    32 GB
    Graphics card(s)
    AMD Quadro Pro 4100
    Sound Card
    Bang and Olufson Audio
    Hard Drives
    1TB SSD
    Mouse
    HP USB Mouse
    Antivirus
    Windows Defender
If anyone wants the exact PowerShell helper I used, I can share it, but I’d strongly suggest reading it first and only running it elevated if you understand what it does. I don't want any trouble. I'm here to help, after 2 days of pain trying to fix this and nothing I found on the internet helped.
There's actually a long, deep dive on the out of control size of the CapabilityAccessManager DB, but it's not written from the perspective of a "Wi-Fi" problem.

Out of Control Capability Access Manager.db-Wal File Size

TLDR: It's believed MS knows there's a bug, and maybe it'll get fixed by the June 2026 Preview (?)

The author also provides a fix script on GitHub:
ProactiveRemediations/CapabilityAccessManager Cleanup/CapabilityAccessManager-Remediation.ps1 at main · AzureToTheMax/ProactiveRemediations
 
Last edited:

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 7
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