Skip to main content

All the ways to lower your CPU temperatures, from easy to expert

If you’re overclocking your processor, want to bring down noise levels, or just want to increase the longevity of your CPU, then lowering it’s temperature is a great plan. There are a lot of ways you can do it, too, from the easy and cheap to the complicated and costly, and everything in-between.

Whatever your reasoning, here’s how to lower your CPU temperatures in a few different ways.

Cooler Master Qube 500 PC case sitting on a coffee table.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Take the side panel off

If you’ve no time, money, or interest in figuring out why your CPU is a bit warm, just take the side panel off. It’ll break any direct airflow you have coming from the fans, but chances are this will get a bit more air to the system and shave a couple of degrees off. Bonus points if you lie your case on its side so that the hot air can rise up out where the missing “side” panel was.

Recommended Videos

Clean your PC

We all know we should do it regularly, but few of us actually do. Cleaning your PC is one of the best ways to quickly and cheaply bring down your CPU’s temperatures. Dust and debris can clog dust filters, preventing cool air from reaching your core components, and a dirty CPU cooler will be working extra hard to deal with that layer of insulating dust.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Give the interior a clean with a dust vacuum or can of compressed air — taking care near sensitive components — and you’ll find your temperatures should improve.

Cable management in the HP Omen 45L.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Clean up your PC

While you’re in there dusting out your PC, make sure that the cooler air being pulled in has a clear path to your CPU cooler. If it has to wade through cables and nooks and crannies, it’s going to be disrupted. That means more air turbulence noise, and less cool air reaching your CPU, leading to higher temperatures.

Tidy away any cables, hide any chunky drives, and make sure there’s a clear path for that air to travel.

Increase fan speeds

If you don’t mind an increase in fan noise, then raising system and CPU cooler fan speeds can make a big difference. In your UEFI/BIOS, switch all the system fans to Performance mode. Do the same for the CPU cooler in the BIOS, or alternatively, if your cooler has its own application or fan controller, you can use that to raise its fan curve to be more aggressive.

A screenshot of Intel Extreme Utility running on Windows 11.
Digital Trends

Undervolt your CPU

Lowering the power your CPU draws will have a big impact on its temperature output, and in some cases that can even result in increased performance if your CPU is thermal throttling. For Intel CPUs, use the Intel XTU or Throttlestop to reduce its voltage offset. For AMD CPUs, you can perform a manual undervolting or turn on “Eco Mode” in the AMD Ryzen Master application for big reductions in CPU power draw.

Do note, however, that aggressive undervolting in AMD’s Eco Mode will lead to an obvious reduction in performance.

Underclock your CPU

Underclocking gives you direct control over your processor’s performance. It’s basically the same process as overclocking your CPU, but you revise the frequencies and voltages downwards instead. Depending on how aggressive your underlcock is, this can have a big impact on your CPU’s temperature, but it will almost certainly reduce performance, too.

Undervolt your graphics card

This might seem unrelated, but trust me: If you have a graphics card, it’s making your CPU hotter. There’s only one component in a PC that can get as hot, or hotter than a CPU, and that’s a graphics card. Undervolting your graphics card will reduce the temperature of your CPU, especially when gaming, and it can actually result in better graphics performance in some cases, too. Quite a few of us at DigitalTrends do this with our home PCs.

Thermal paste application on CPU.
Bill Roberson / DigitalTrends

Repaste your CPU

If your CPU temperatures have gotten worse over time, or you’ve done all of the above and want to try something more invasive, then it’s time to repaste your CPU. This involves taking the cooler off, cleaning away the old heat paste, and adding new paste, or a thermal pad. It’s pretty straightforward, but follow our step-by-step guide if you’ve not done it before.

Upgrade your system cooling

If you only have one system cooling fan or very poor ones, then adding more or buying better versions can help bring down CPU temperatures. It’s unlikely to be dramatic, maybe only a few degrees at best, but it’s an option and it can help improve the look or noise levels of your PC too, depending on your choices.

Want to try a real bootleg version? Take the side panel off and aim a desk fan directly at your CPU cooler.

EK Fluid Conquest system.
Jacob Roach / DigitalTrends

Upgrade your CPU cooler

If you’re using a cheap or stock CPU cooler, then this step will have the biggest difference on your CPU temperatures. You can buy a big air cooler, an AIO watercooler, or build a custom watercooling loop; It’s entirely up to you. Just make sure that the cooler you’re installing is better than the one you had, and you should see some improved temperatures and noise levels.

A delidded Ryzen 7000 CPU.
AMD

Delid your CPU

This is an extreme step, but it can have a dramatic impact on CPU temperatures. It involves using specialized tools — or very carefully doing it with a razor blade and a heat gun — to remove the internal heat spreader on your CPU. Then you have to attach the cooler to the naked die without putting too much pressure on it.

It’s incredibly fiddly, and even with modern tools making the process a bit easier and safer, there are still many ways to crack, rip, or break your processor forever by doing this, so proceed with the utmost caution and after conducting in-depth research.

Turn on the AC

This isn’t the most costly, or the most effective, but it is the most inefficient. Cooling an entire room just to bring down your CPU temperatures is very wasteful, but it’s also pretty effective. Every degree you shave off the ambient temperature should equate to a degree coming off your processor if your system airflow and CPU cooler are at least half-decent.

Opening a window works well in winter too, and you can always duct in some cool air from outside if you like.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is a freelance evergreen writer and occasional section coordinator, covering how to guides, best-of lists, and…
This next CPU generation is starting to feel skippable for gamers
The AMD Ryzen 5 9600X between two finger tips.

The two most exciting PC components to upgrade are the graphics card and the processor. We haven't seen next-gen graphics cards yet, and we're unlikely to see them this year, but both Intel and AMD have released (or will release) new processors. However, this generation of CPUs is quickly turning out to be the one to skip.

With AMD Ryzen 9000 series already here, and with Intel Arrow Lake-S on the imminent horizon, you'd think that gamers would be lining up to upgrade. But as a gamer, I haven't felt less excited about a generation of CPUs in quite a long time.
Ryzen 9000 barely makes a difference

Read more
AMD’s new CPU could silently replace the Ryzen 7 7800X3D
The AMD Ryzen 5 7600X3D CPU.

AMD just expanded its lineup of gaming CPUs, but it's not a Zen 5 chip. Instead, AMD launched a new Zen 4 CPU, the Ryzen 5 7600X3D. Once again a Micro Center exclusive, the CPU could be an interesting budget offering ... if not for the fact that it still costs a pretty penny. Meanwhile, the Ryzen 7 7800X3D seems to be disappearing from the market. What's going on?

The fact that AMD revisited the Zen 4 lineup is not surprising, as it still continues to release Zen 3 chips. It's also not shocking that the Ryzen 5 7600X3D is a Micro Center exclusive, as the Ryzen 5 5600X3D was also only available at that one retailer. In the case of the 7600X3D, though, it'll also be available in Germany through Mindfactory.

Read more
Your AMD Ryzen CPU is about 10% slower than it should be
The AMD Ryzen 7 9700X installed in a motherboard.

AMD's Zen 5 CPUs haven't been able to impress in gaming, showing only small generational improvements -- but there are still some free frame rates to be won here. According to a comprehensive set of gaming benchmarks, a new Windows Update might be all that it takes to improve the performance of AMD's best processors, and this includes Zen 4 CPUs, too.

Earlier this month, Hardware Unboxed revealed that AMD's latest CPUs might be missing out on some frames per second (fps) in games due to a Windows bug. Switching to an Admin account (which is a little harder than it seems to be) fixed the problem, boosting both Zen 4 and Zen 5 CPUs by a considerable amount. AMD also hinted that this might be the issue behind Zen 5's lackluster performance, although it also blamed other factors, such as using different test suites or not running on Admin mode.

Read more