Use computer wifi on phone

How to Connect Your PC to Your Mobile Hotspot

Tim Fisher has more than 30 years’ of professional technology experience. He’s been writing about tech for more than two decades and serves as the SVP and General Manager of Lifewire.

Ryan Perian is a certified IT specialist who holds numerous IT certifications and has 12+ years’ experience working in the IT industry support and management positions.

What to Know

  • Wired: On PC, turn off Wi-Fi > turn on hotspot on phone > plug phone into PC. PC should connect to it automatically.
  • Wireless: On phone, turn on hotpot > use PC to find phone’s Wi-Fi signal > connect.

This article explains how to connect your PC to a hotspot created on your mobile device. This will let you share your phone’s mobile internet connection with your laptop or desktop, something you might need to do if there’s no Wi-Fi where you are. We’ll also look at the differences between various hotspot connection types: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and USB.

The screenshots and steps described in this article are relevant specifically to a PC running Windows 11, and a Pixel phone running Android 12. The steps vary slightly between other devices; some of those differences are called out below.

How Do I Connect My Personal Hotspot to My Computer?

Follow these steps if you want to set up USB tethering on your phone to share internet with just one other device, or skip down to the next section to learn about making a wireless hotspot. Using a USB connection is ideal if security and battery life are concerns.

Wi-Fi is off prompt highlighted in Windows 11.

  1. Turn off Wi-Fi on your computer. If there’s a wireless network in range, you don’t want to accidentally connect to it, since the plan is to use your phone’s connection instead.

Steps to enable USB tetherin in Android 12 on Pixel phone.

Start the hotspot on your phone. It’s called Personal Hotspot on iPhone/iPad, and hotspot & tethering on some Android phones. Those links describe all the necessary steps to get to the right screen and enable the hotspot. If you’re using Android, choose USB tethering from that screen. Apple users need to have iTunes installed.

How Can I Connect My Mobile Hotspot to PC Without USB Cable?

You can share your phone’s internet with your computer over a wireless connection, too. It opens up the network to more than just one computer, so all your devices can share the same internet connection.

Wi-Fi is the fastest option, but if you’d rather connect your hotspot to your PC with Bluetooth, see how to get internet on your PC with a Bluetooth-enabled phone for those directions. Toward the bottom of this page is a look at Wi-Fi vs Bluetooth hotspots.

Steps in Android 12 to enable a hotspot and tethering on a Pixel phone.

  1. Turn on the hotspot on your phone (see steps above for help).

Setup directions vary considerably if you’re using a dedicated mobile hotspot not built-in to your phone. You might need to simply power it on and follow the steps you see on its screen, or there might be a mobile app you pair with the hotspot to complete setup. Directions are provided with the hotspot upon purchase, but they should also be available from the manufacturer’s website.

Selecting the hotspot from a Pixel phone in Windows 11.

Connect to the newly made wireless network from your computer. To connect to a network in Windows 11, select the network icon by the clock, select Manage Wi-Fi connections next to the Wi-Fi icon, and then select the hotspot you made in the previous step.

What’s Better for Hotspots: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or USB?

It seems redundant to have so many options just for a hotspot, but each of these connection methods have their own unique benefits and costs.

Here are some things to consider when choosing between these options for a PC:

  • Wi-Fi: The ability to connect several devices to the hotspot is convenient, and you can choose a specific hotspot name and password to use for added security. But older computers don’t have built-in Wi-Fi, and battery draining is a concern if you’re not plugged in.
  • Bluetooth: Not all computers have Bluetooth connectivity, only one device can use this connection at a time, and it’ll likely offer the slowest speeds. Pick this if USB isn’t an option but power consumption is a concern, since it probably won’t demand as much power from your phone as Wi-Fi will.
  • USB: A physical connection is more secure than a wireless one because nefarious users nearby can’t attach to the network. Your phone will charge in the process, so it’s also a good way to save phone battery while using the hotspot. However, you’ll need a free USB port on the PC, and the phone must be plugged in at all times, which isn’t ideal if you want the flexibility to move the phone around the room.

Watch Your Mobile Hotspot Data Usage

All three of those connection types use your phone’s data plan to reach the internet. Be aware of this if you have a limited data plan. Some carriers offer even less data to hotspots than they do normal connections.

This means everything you do on your computer while it’s connected to your phone’s hotspot, will eat away at your mobile data. Even if you have unlimited data, you might still be restricted in terms of how much hotspot data, specifically, you can use throughout the month. Check with your mobile operator for specific details.

It’s important to avoid downloading or uploading huge files on your computer, and updating your PC’s software while it’s using the hotspot. Those are activities you might not think twice about when using your computer at home, but you should definitely rethink how you use the internet when data is limited. Check out these other ways you can reduce mobile data usage.

Most devices make it easy to monitor your data usage, and some even let you set up data usage alerts. It’s recommended to keep an eye on it so you’ll know when you’re approaching or when you’ve reached the limit you impose for yourself.

Why Is My PC Not Connecting to a Mobile Hotspot?

Below are several ideas for what you can do if your computer can’t reach the internet through the hotspot.

  • Make sure the PC’s Wi-Fi is disabled if you’re connected over USB. The computer might still be reaching for a Wi-Fi network, or maybe it’s connected to a Wi-Fi network with no internet access.
  • Double-check the hotspot on your phone shows an internet connection. You might need to contact your carrier if this is your first time trying to use the hotspot; they might need to enable the feature on their end, or you might need to pay extra to create a hotspot.
  • Is your computer too far from your phone? If you’re using the Wi-Fi or Bluetooth option, you’ve probably walked too far from your PC for the connection to remain established.
  • Did your phone have an active mobile internet connection prior to making the hotspot? A valid connection on your phone is necessary for your computer to ultimately use it. Turn airplane mode on and then off, to refresh the connection, or see what to do when mobile data isn’t working.
  • Unless you subscribe to an unlimited data plan with your mobile carrier, there’s an upper limit to how much data can pass through your phone. Your plan’s data might have been paused if you reached its limit. You can usually contact your mobile operator to get more data.
  • A «tethering has no internet» message might appear on your phone if you tried to turn the hotspot on, but airplane mode was already on. Disable airplane mode and try again.
  • See how to fix hotspot issues on iPhone or how to fix USB tethering issues in Windows, if you’re still having trouble.

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Use your Windows PC as a mobile hotspot

Turn your Windows PC into a mobile hotspot by sharing your internet connection with other devices over Wi-Fi. You can share a Wi-Fi, Ethernet, or cellular data connection. If your PC has a cellular data connection and you share it, it will use data from your data plan.

  1. Select Start , then select Settings >Network & internet >Mobile hotspot.
  2. For Share my internet connection from, choose the internet connection you want to share.
  3. For Share over, choose how you want to share your connection—over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. Wi-Fi is usually faster and the default.
  4. (Optional) Expand the Properties section, then select Edit and enter a new network name, password, and network band. Select Save.
  5. Turn on the Mobile hotspot toggle at the top of the Mobile hotspot settings page.

Note: You can turn on your mobile hotspot remotely if your PC has cellular. To allow your Windows PC to turn on your mobile hotspot, both devices must have Bluetooth and be paired.

Turn your Windows 10 PC into a mobile hotspot by sharing your Internet connection with other devices over Wi-Fi. You can share a Wi-Fi, Ethernet, or cellular data connection. If your PC has a cellular data connection and you share it, it will use data from your data plan.

  1. Select Start , then select Settings >Network & Internet >Mobile hotspot.
  2. For Share my Internet connection from, choose the Internet connection you want to share.
  3. If desired, select Edit > enter a new network name and password >Save.
  4. Turn on Share my Internet connection with other devices.
  5. To connect on the other device, go to the Wi-Fi settings on that device, find your network name, select it, enter the password, and then connect.

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