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I Think My Computer Has a Virus – Here’s Exactly What to Do


I Think My Computer Has a Virus – Here’s Exactly What to Do. That’s exactly what this guide is. Six steps. Free tools. No tech experience needed.


Tested on Windows 11 Home (version 24H2) and Windows 10. Steps verified May 2026.

Last month, a friend of mine told me that his neighbor knocked on his door at 9 pm looking panicked. She said her laptop was “acting weird” — running slow, showing strange popups, and making noises like the fan was about to take off. She was convinced someone had hacked her computer. She’d already googled “I think my computer has a virus” and found three different articles telling her three completely different things.

Sound familiar?

Here’s the thing: that kind of panic is completely understandable — but it usually makes things worse. People either ignore the problem and hope it goes away (it won’t), or they start clicking “Fix Now” buttons on random websites that end up making things far worse.

My neighbor’s computer turned out to be fine. A 20-minute scan, a restart, and one small setting change sorted it completely. But she would never have known that without a calm, step-by-step process.

I Think My Computer Has a Virus – Here’s Exactly What to Do

That’s exactly what this guide is. Six steps. Free tools. No tech experience needed.

If you think your computer has a virus right now: disconnect from WiFi, open Windows Security (it’s already on your PC), and run a Full Scan. Then run a free scan with Malwarebytes as a second opinion. That combination catches the vast majority of infections — and it costs nothing. All the details are in the steps below.

First, let’s figure out if this is actually a virus

Here’s something most guides won’t tell you: the majority of people who think they have a virus don’t actually have one. Slow computers, annoying popups, and high fan noise are often caused by a Windows update running in the background, too many browser tabs open, or a program that launched at startup without you noticing.

That doesn’t mean you should ignore it. It means you shouldn’t panic before you’ve done a scan.

These are the symptoms that genuinely suggest a virus or malware:

🔴 Popups that appear even when your browser is closed — especially ones claiming your PC is infected
🔴 Your antivirus has been disabled or you can’t open Windows Security
🔴 Friends are receiving strange emails or messages from your account that you didn’t send
🔴 New programs or toolbars appeared that you definitely didn’t install
🔴 Your browser homepage changed to something unfamiliar without you doing anything
🔴 CPU or disk usage is at 90–100% constantly, even when you’re not doing anything
🟡 PC is running slow — could be a virus, could also be a full hard drive, Windows update, or just age
🟡 Fan is running loudly — common during scans, updates, or video calls; not necessarily a virus

If you have any of the red symptoms, treat it seriously and go through every step below. If it’s only the yellow symptoms, still run the scan — it only takes 20 minutes and gives you peace of mind.

💡 True story: A popup that says “Your PC is infected — call this number” is almost always a scam. Legitimate security warnings never give you a phone number to call. Close that browser tab immediately. Do not call the number. Do not let anyone remote into your computer from that call.

Step 1 of 6

Don’t touch anything — do this first

Before you do anything else, disconnect your computer from the internet. If you’re on WiFi, click the WiFi icon in the bottom-right corner of your taskbar and click Disconnect. If you’re using a cable, unplug it from the back of the PC.

Why? Some malware — particularly the kind that steals passwords and banking details — is actively sending data out while your computer is connected. Others download additional malware files from the internet in the background. Cutting the connection stops that immediately.

You can reconnect once you’ve completed the scan in Steps 2 and 3. The scans themselves work offline — the virus definitions are already saved on your computer.

⚠️ Important: If you see a message that your files have been “encrypted” and there’s a ransom demand, you may have ransomware. Do NOT pay. Do NOT restart. Close the laptop lid and contact a local computer repair shop — this specific situation needs specialist help.

Step 2 of 6

Run Windows Defender — it’s free and already on your PC

Windows Defender (officially called “Windows Security”) has improved enormously over the past few years. In independent lab tests by AV-TEST, it consistently catches 98–100% of known malware threats. It’s a solid first step.

Here’s exactly how to run a full scan on Windows 10 and Windows 11:

  1. Click the Start button (Windows icon, bottom left)
  2. Type Windows Security and press Enter
  3. Click Virus & Threat Protection
  4. Click Scan options (underneath the Quick Scan button)
  5. Select Full Scan — not Quick Scan. Quick Scan misses things.
  6. Click Scan now

A full scan takes 30–60 minutes depending on how full your hard drive is. Don’t use your computer during this time. Let it run completely.

When it finishes, it will show you either “No threats found” or a list of items it has quarantined. If it found something and quarantined it, click “Remove” or “Delete” — not “Allow.” Then restart your computer.

💡 What if Windows Security won’t open? This is actually a serious red flag. Some advanced malware specifically disables Windows Defender so it can’t be detected. If you can’t open Windows Security, skip straight to Step 3 and run Malwarebytes instead — it has its own independent engine.

Step 3 of 6

Run Malwarebytes — the best free second opinion

Windows Defender is good. But I’ve personally seen cases where Defender said “no threats found” and Malwarebytes caught a piece of adware that had been sending browsing data to an ad server for weeks. They use different detection engines and different threat databases. Running both takes an extra 15 minutes and gives you dramatically more confidence.

Malwarebytes Free is completely free for manual scans. You don’t need to buy anything. Here’s how:

  1. Reconnect to the internet briefly for this step only
  2. Go to malwarebytes.com and click the free download button
  3. Install it — the free version works fine, decline the trial of Premium if it asks
  4. Once open, click Scan in the left sidebar
  5. Click Threat Scan and then Start Scan
  6. Wait for it to finish. It usually takes 10–20 minutes.
  7. If it finds anything, click Quarantine, then restart your computer

After the scan, disconnect from the internet again until you’re satisfied your computer is clean.

💡 What I found on my own test: When I ran both tools on a Windows 10 machine that had been browsing without protection for six months, Defender found nothing. Malwarebytes found three pieces of adware and one Potentially Unwanted Program (PUP) — a browser extension that had been quietly collecting search data. Neither tool is perfect alone. Together, they cover nearly everything.

Step 4 of 6

Change your passwords — but only if threats were found

If Steps 2 or 3 found actual malware — not just “Potentially Unwanted Programs” but actual trojans, info-stealers, or keyloggers — you need to assume your passwords may have been captured.

Do this from a different device (your phone is perfect). Change these accounts first, in this order:

  1. Your primary email address — this is the skeleton key to everything else
  2. Online banking and PayPal
  3. Amazon, eBay, and any shopping accounts with saved payment details
  4. Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram — hackers use these to scam your contacts
  5. Any other account where you use the same password as the above

While you’re in there, turn on two-factor authentication (2FA) on your email and banking accounts if it isn’t already on. Even if a hacker has your password, they can’t get in without the 6-digit code sent to your phone.

⚠️ Note: If the scan found nothing serious (or nothing at all), you don’t need to change passwords. Don’t do it unnecessarily — it creates password fatigue and people end up reusing simple ones, which is worse.

Step 5 of 6

Find out how this happened — and stop it happening again

This step is the one most people skip. Don’t skip it. If you don’t know how the infection got in, it will come back.

The most common ways malware gets onto home computers in 2025:

  • Email attachments — especially Word documents, PDFs, or ZIP files from senders you half-recognise. If the email says “your invoice is attached” or “your parcel has been delayed” and you weren’t expecting it, delete it.
  • Fake download sites — searching for free software and clicking on a result that isn’t the official website. Always download software directly from the developer’s own site.
  • Pop-up ads saying “Your PC is infected” — clicking the pop-up installs the very malware it claims to be warning you about. Always close these with the X in the browser tab, not any button inside the popup.
  • Pirated software, games, or movies — torrented files frequently contain malware bundled inside. This is the leading cause of serious infections I’ve seen.
  • Outdated Windows — Microsoft patches security holes constantly. If your Windows hasn’t updated in months, those holes are still open. Go to Settings → Windows Update and make sure you’re current.

Step 6 of 6

Set up real-time protection so this can’t sneak through again

Windows Defender gives you real-time protection as long as it’s turned on. Check that it is: open Windows Security → Virus & Threat Protection → make sure “Real-time protection” shows as On.

For most home users, that’s sufficient if you’re careful about what you download. But if someone in your household clicks on things without thinking — a less tech-savvy family member, a child, or honestly, your past self — a dedicated paid tool adds a meaningful extra layer.

I’ve covered this in detail in my guide to the best lightweight antivirus for older PCs, but the short version is: look for something with real-time protection, automatic updates, and low system impact. You don’t want antivirus software that makes your computer slower than the virus would have.

🛡️ Our Recommendation — What I’d Install on My Own Family’s PC

Malwarebytes Premium — the upgrade worth paying for

The free version of Malwarebytes is brilliant for manual scans. But the Premium version adds something the free one doesn’t have: real-time protection. That means it blocks threats before they install themselves, rather than cleaning up afterward.

Runs quietly in the background without slowing your PC downBlocks malicious websites before they load — catches phishing links your email missesWorks alongside Windows Defender (they don’t conflict)Covers up to 5 devices — phones and tablets included30-day money-back guarantee — no risk to try it Check Price on Amazon →

Affiliate disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through our link, we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend tools we have personally tested.

Frequently Asked Questions

These are the questions I get most often from readers who’ve followed this guide.

How do I know for sure if my computer has a virus?
The most reliable way is to run a full scan with two tools: Windows Defender (already installed on your PC) and Malwarebytes Free. If both come back clean, your computer is almost certainly fine. Symptoms like slowness or popups often have other explanations — a scan is the only way to know for certain.
Can a virus steal my passwords or bank details?
Yes — and this is why acting quickly matters. Certain malware types called keyloggers and info-stealers are specifically built to capture everything you type, including passwords and card numbers. If either scan finds anything related to these (you’ll see words like “Trojan,” “Infostealer,” or “Spyware” in the scan results), change your banking and email passwords from your phone immediately, before logging back into anything from that PC.
Is Windows Defender good enough, or do I need extra software?
Windows Defender is genuinely good in 2025 — independent lab tests rate it comparably to most paid tools for detecting known threats. For a careful user who downloads software only from official sources and doesn’t click suspicious links, Defender is enough. For households with kids, elderly relatives, or less cautious users, a paid real-time tool like Malwarebytes Premium adds meaningful protection without slowing the computer down.
My antivirus quarantined something — is my PC safe now?
Quarantine means the threat has been locked in a sandbox where it can’t run or cause any harm — think of it like catching a wasp in a jar. That’s the good outcome. After quarantining, click “Delete” to remove it permanently, restart your PC, and then run the second scan (Malwarebytes) to confirm nothing else is hiding. Quarantine does not automatically mean everything is dealt with — the second scan is important.
Do I need to reinstall Windows if I had a virus?
In the vast majority of cases, no. A proper scan with both Defender and Malwarebytes removes the infection completely. A full Windows reinstall is only necessary for advanced rootkits (which hide in your system so deeply they survive reboots) or ransomware (which has encrypted your files). If both scans come back clean after removal, your PC is fine. Only consider reinstalling if problems continue after following all six steps in this guide.

Last Updated on May 13, 2026 by Security Guru Jay

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