Your Slow Computer Isn't Dying. It's Full.
You click, and you wait. The little circle spins. The fan hums like the machine is working far too hard for the small thing you asked of it. And two expensive guesses start forming: it caught a virus, or it's worn out and a new one is the only cure.
Hold both guesses. A desktop or laptop that has slowed down over months or years is usually a computer that has filled up — and what filled it can be cleared out.
Microsoft's own troubleshooting page for a slow PC lists twelve fixes. A malware scan is one of the twelve. Almost everything else is housekeeping: free up the drive, trim what launches at startup, uninstall what you don't use, close what you don't need. The company that built Windows treats slowness, first and foremost, as a buildup problem.
What actually piles up
Four kinds of buildup do most of the damage:
- Startup programs. Many programs set themselves to launch every time the computer starts. Microsoft is direct about the cost: apps that run at startup slow boot time and add background load, whether or not you ever open them.
- A nearly full drive. Windows needs room to work. Microsoft's storage guidance says a PC running out of space can mean slower performance and trouble installing Windows updates — including the ones that keep it secure.
- The browser. Every open tab keeps a web page stored in memory, and Mozilla warns that extensions can make a browser use more resources than it normally would. Twenty tabs and a stack of add-ons is a real workload, even on a good machine.
- Temp files and leftovers. Installer remnants, caches, files from programs you removed years ago. It builds quietly, and it never cleans itself up.
The free fixes first
Five steps, no purchase, maybe five minutes of clicking. They revive more slow computers than anything you can buy:
- Restart it. A real shutdown-and-restart clears temporary clutter and stops runaway background activity. A machine that only ever sleeps may have gone weeks without one.
- Trim the startup list. Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager, choose "Startup apps," and disable what doesn't need to launch on its own.
- Free up drive space. In Settings > System > Storage, open "Temporary files" and remove them. Turn on Storage Sense and that cleanup happens automatically from then on.
- Lighten the browser. Close the tabs you've been saving "just in case," and remove extensions you don't remember choosing.
- Install updates. Performance fixes ship inside them, right alongside the security patches.
Do those five and most slow computers improve the same day.
The chore everyone skips
The five steps above are quick. The deeper layer is slower going: cached files scattered across dozens of programs, leftovers from software you uninstalled years ago, duplicate downloads, temp folders that the built-in tools only partly reach. Clearing that layer by hand means an afternoon of digging, and it's the chore almost everyone quietly skips.
That one chore is what a cleanup tool is for. It finds the cached files, the leftovers, and the space-eaters across the whole machine and clears them in a single pass — the work you'd never do folder by folder.
Clear years of buildup in one pass →
A cleaner clears buildup; checking for malicious software is a scanner's job, and a cleaner won't do it.
When slow means something else
Malware can slow a computer down — Microsoft keeps a scan on its checklist for good reason. But slowness alone is weak evidence. Real infections tend to announce themselves as a cluster: programs you don't remember installing, settings changed on their own, messages sent from your accounts that you never wrote. If several of those are happening together, set the cleanup aside — we've walked through exactly how to read those red flags, and that's the path to follow instead.
And yes, sometimes a machine is simply old. Microsoft concedes that PCs with outdated hardware may see only modest gains from any of this. But age is the last guess to reach for, for one practical reason: a computer that ran fine two years ago and crawls today almost always has a software problem with a software fix. Buying a new machine to fix a full drive is the most expensive cleanup there is.
Start with what piled up
The two scary explanations — infection, old age — sit at the rare ends of the list. The ordinary explanation sits in the middle: years of accumulation that nobody ever cleared. Run the five free fixes tonight. Then let a tool dig out everything the years left behind, and find out how much of your computer was buried under the junk.