If you have a Dell laptop running Windows 11 and you’ve been experiencing it regularly crashing every half an hour or so, you aren’t alone by any means — and thankfully there appears to be a solution.
After a tip from a reader, Neowin picked up that there are multiple reports on the Dell community forum complaining that the laptop maker’s SupportAssist software is bugged, and causing crashes where the PC completely freezes with a Black Screen of Death (BSOD).
There are a number of reports on Dell’s forum, and also on Reddit, noting that the issue is hitting fleets of PCs (in the business world), as well as individual laptops, including Alienware gaming notebooks (there are a couple of cases mentioned, including for example an Alienware M16 R2).
Essentially, any laptop with SupportAssist installed could be prone to this bug, and going by the number of complaints, it’s not uncommon — though it isn’t clear how widespread the glitch is exactly.
Seemingly this has been caused by a recent update to Dell SupportAssist, and if you’ve encountered BSOD crashes and reboots happening regularly with your device, there is a solution that seems to have worked for most folks.
How to deal with Dell SupportAssist crashes
There are multiple reports of laptop owners or IT admins who have fixed this issue, and they all come back to the same solution: removing SupportAssist or disabling the service.
If you’re reaching the end of your tether due to crashes and want to get rid of SupportAssist, that’s as simple as heading into Settings and going to the Apps panel, then into the list of ‘Installed apps’. Scroll down to find Dell SupportAssist, click the ellipsis (three-dot icon) on the right, and select ‘Uninstall’.
You’re not quite done, though, as there’s also a Dell SupportAssist Remediation app — at which the finger of blame is actually being pointed by many — so you need to remove that as well. Some folks suggest removing everything pertaining to SupportAssist, which means ditching a third service, Dell SupportAssist OS Recovery Plugin, too.
After you’re done with those, reboot your PC and hopefully you’ll find the crashes are no longer happening. If you only removed the main app, and not all three, and that doesn’t cure the issue, it’s worth trying ditching them all. Remember that without SupportAssist, you will have to manually search for and apply any laptop firmware updates (from Dell’s support website).
You can always reinstall these apps at a later date, once we hear from Dell that SupportAssist is fixed. Of course, remember that we haven’t heard anything official from Dell yet, so this problem isn’t confirmed — and ditto for the solution. But, going by most reports, removing SupportAssist works (although do note that I’ve seen the odd comment complaining that a laptop is still crashing even after ditching the app).
Another route suggested by some is to try merely disabling Dell SupportAssist Remediation (rather than engaging in any uninstallation). Do this by typing the following into the search box in the Windows 11 taskbar:
services.msc
Press Enter and this will pop up the services panel showing all local running services, so you’ll need to scroll down and find Dell SupportAssist Remediation. Right-click on it, then select ‘Properties’, and in the panel that appears, in the dropdown menu called ‘Startup type’, select ‘Disabled’ (you can reenable it later by changing it back to ‘Automatic’).
Neowin also observes that this bug has seemingly cropped up before — last year in fact, where a different cure was found to work. This involved opening SupportAssist and running the ‘scan hardware’ option, and after that process had finished it seemingly did the trick (though it may take a while).
In the meantime, we’ll just have to wait to hear from Dell about what might be going on here, but there’s an obvious irony about an app that facilitates technical support causing a show-stopping problem on some laptops.
As one Redditor put it: “The irony of SupportAssist being the cause. I’m so glad I’m no longer in IT.”

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