If your computer is suddenly inundated with pop-up ads or your browser keeps sending you to the wrong websites, you may be infected with adware. Windows and Mac are both vulnerable to malicious software that can hijack your browser and litter your screen with advertisements. If your computer has been infected while not protected by security software, you may be worried that youβve lost everything on your system. Fortunately, there are just as many Internet security experts out there as there are malicious coders, and these experts have ensured that there are many ways to manually remove adware in the event youβve βcaughtβ something.
Steps
-
Boot into Safe Mode with Networking Support. With all removable media (such as CDs and flash drives) removed, restart the computer in Safe Mode.
- Windows 8 and 10:
- Press β Win + X and select βShut down or Sign Out,β then choose βRestart.β
- When the computer boots to the login screen, hold down the β§ Shift key as you click the power icon. The computer will restart again.
- When it comes back up, click βTroubleshoot,β then βAdvanced Options,β then βStartup Settings,β then βRestart.β
- At the resulting boot options screen, press the key next to βSafe Mode with Networkingβ (it will be either F5 or 5 , depending on your computer).
- Windows 7 and prior: Click the Start menu, then click the arrow next to βShut Down.β Select Restart. Once the computer clicks off and then turns back on, start tapping the F8 key to launch a boot menu. Use the arrow keys to navigate to βSafe Mode With Networkingβ and press β΅ Enter .
- Windows 8 and 10:
-
2Start your browser to check for rogue extensions or add-ons. [1] X Research source Often adware takes the form of browser extensions or add-ons.
- In Chrome: Click the Chrome menu (in the top right corner of the browser, marked by three horizontal lines) and select βSettings.β Click βExtensions,β then look for any extensions you donβt recognize. If anything looks unfamiliar, click the associated trash icon.
- Firefox: Check your Add-ons by clicking the Open menu (three horizontal lines) in the top right corner of the screen and selecting βAdd-ons.β Now click βExtensionsβ and look for anything you donβt recognize. To disable an extension, click it once then click βDisable.β
Advertisement -
Check your browser start page, search engines and other defaults. Sometimes adware will hijack your browserβs default webpage and search engines.
- Chrome: Click βSettingsβ in the Chrome menu, then click βSet Pagesβ (just below βOn Startupβ). If you see anything other than a blank page or a page you specifically configured to show up when you start the browser, select the listed site, then press the X to delete.
- Make sure the Chrome buttons havenβt been messed with. In the same Settings menu, find the Appearance section. Select βShow Home Button.β Now click βChange,β then select βUse the New Tab Page.β Click βOkβ to save your changes.
- Verify your search engine settings in the Settings menu by clicking βManage Search Enginesβ under βSearch.β Choose the search engine you use and select βMake default.β Make sure the URL on the right side of the screen matches the name of the search engine! If you see Yahoo.com on the left, but the URL on the right starts with anything other than search.yahoo.com, delete it with the X marker on the screen.
- Firefox: In the Open menu, select βOptions,β then βRestore to Default.β Click OK to continue.
- To verify Search Engine settings, click the Open menu and select βOptions.β On the left bar, click βSearchβ and set your default search engine to something reputable like Google or Bing. If anything you donβt recognize is listed beneath βOne-click search engines,β click it once, then click βRemove.β
- Chrome: Click βSettingsβ in the Chrome menu, then click βSet Pagesβ (just below βOn Startupβ). If you see anything other than a blank page or a page you specifically configured to show up when you start the browser, select the listed site, then press the X to delete.
-
See what programs are set to start automatically. Press β Win + S to launch the search field. Type
msconfig
into the blank to launch the System Configuration panel. When it appears in the search results, click the file. If you are asked to confirm, select βYesβ or βOK.β- Click the Startup tab to see a list of all programs set to start when the computer boots (Windows 8 and 10 users may be redirected to the Task Manager, but the rest of the steps will be similar).
- Browse through the list and see if anything stands out as adware. Itβs a good idea to search the internet from a non-infected computer for the names of anything you donβt recognizeβsome things may look legitimate when they actually arenβt, and vice-versa. Next to the name of the software youβll find the company who published it. The companies listed can help you figure out which startup programs are legitimate. To disable anything you donβt recognize, remove the check from the box preceding it (or if youβre on Windows 8 or 10, click the program, then click βDisableβ).
-
Save your settings and restart the computer. If youβre using Windows 7 or earlier, click βApply,β then βOK.β If youβre using Windows 8 or later, just click the X to close the Task Manager window.
-
Check for programs that can be uninstalled. [2] X Research source If your computer still has pop-ups or intrusive ads upon reboot, see if thereβs any software that can be removed by a typical uninstallation. Open the search bar and type
Programs
and click βPrograms and Featuresβ when it appears.- In the list of installed software, look for anything you donβt recognize. You can sort the list by install date by clicking on the date at the top of the list.
- To uninstall a piece of software, click it once, then click βUninstall.β Restart the computer after uninstalling software.
-
7Run an antivirus scan. Using Microsoft Defender or your preferred antivirus, run a scan to catch any adware programs on your computer. It will let you know that the malicious apps were removed. If youβre unable to remove the adware (this is rare but it happens), write down the name of the adware and proceed.
-
Get removal instructions from Symantec. In Safe Mode or on a different computer, visit Symantecβs A to Z listing of Malware. [3] X Research source This frequently-updated site contains links to removal instructions of nearly every type of adware in existence. Select the first letter of the name of your adware and scroll down until you find it. Click the name of your adware.
-
Click βRemovalβ to view instructions. The first set of instructions pertains to users of Symantec security software. If you donβt use their software, scroll to the second step and follow the removal instructions as indicated. All adware is different, and some are more difficult to remove than others. Reboot the computer when youβre finished with all of the instructions on the page that corresponds to your adware.
-
Run a System Restore. If youβve made it this far and have not had success removing the adware, run a System Restore to bring your PC back to a date when it was functioning properly.
-
Block pop-up windows in your browser. This crucial step makes it possible to complete the rest of this method with minimal annoyances.
- Safari: In the βSafariβ menu, select βPreferences.β Click βSecurityβ and select βBlock pop-up windows. Deselect βAllow WebGLβ and βAllow Plugins.β
- Chrome: In the Chrome menu (the three horizontal lines), click βSettings,β and then scroll to the bottom to click on βShow advanced settings.β Click βPrivacy,β then βContent Settings,β and select βDo not allow any site to show pop-ups.β
-
Check your browser settings for rogue search engines and extensions.
- Safari: In the Safari menu, select βPreferences,β then βExtensions.β If anything is listed that you donβt recognize, click βUninstall.β Now, click to the βGeneralβ tab and make sure your default search engine is set to something you recognize. If not, set it to the search engine you use regularly. Safari has some defaults pre-programmed into the software. Choosing Google is a safe bet.
- Chrome: In the Chrome menu, select βSettings,β then βExtensions.β Click the trash icon next to any extensions you donβt recognize. Next, click βSettingsβ on the left menu and scroll down to βAdvanced Settingsβ and follow the link.
- Scroll down to βOn Startupβ and make sure βOpen the New Tab pageβ is selected.
- Scroll down to βSearchβ and click βManage Search Engines.β Make sure every search engine listed in the top box is one you recognize. Pay special attention to the URL on the right side, as adware programs might pretend to be Google but actually be pointing you to another website. Delete anything suspicious by clicking the X next to the site.
-
Download Apple Support article HT203987 as a PDF. [4] X Research source Because the next steps require the browser to be closed, youβll need to save the website to your computer. Point your browser to https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT203987. Once the site has loaded, click βFile,β then βPrint,β then βSave as PDF.β Select your Desktop as the saving location so you can easily find it in a moment.
-
Use the βGo to Folderβ method to locate adware. Youβll be using this action a lot, so try to become familiar with it.
- Open the PDF file you just created and scroll down to the list of files that begins with
/System/Library/Frameworks/v.framework
. Highlight the first line in that list of files (itβs the one in the example) and click βEdit,β then βCopy.β - Open Finder and click βView,β then βAs Columns.β Click βGo,β then βGo to Folder.β
- Click βEdit,β then βPasteβ to paste the file you highlighted previously into the box. Press β Return to search for the file. If the file is found, drag it to the Trash. If not, copy the next file in the list from the PDF and do the same.
- Repeat the βGo to Methodβ with each of the files in the list. When finished, empty the Trash by clicking βFinder,β then βEmpty Trash.β Restart the computer.
- Open the PDF file you just created and scroll down to the list of files that begins with
-
See if other known Adware is running. If the computer comes back up and thereβs still adware, open Finder, click βApplications,β and select βUtilities.β Click βActivity Monitor.β On the CPU tab, click βProcess Nameβ to alphabetize the column and look for processes called either βInstallMacβ or βGenieo.β
- If you see either of these programs running in Activity Monitor, repeat the βGo to Folderβ process with the following text:
/private/etc/launchd.conf
. Once thatβs finished, restart your computer again. - Return to the Apple PDF and scroll down to βRemove Genieo, InstallMacβ and repeat the process with each of the files listed beneath βRestart your Mac.β Once youβve gone through each file and dragged any necessary files to the Trash, restart your computer.
- Use βGo to Folderβ once the computer comes back up, this time with the file
/Library/Frameworks/GenieoExtra.framework
. Empty the Trash (in Finder).
- If you see either of these programs running in Activity Monitor, repeat the βGo to Folderβ process with the following text:
-
Restart the computer. Your computer should now be adware-free. If, when the computer comes back up, it is still infected with adware, youβll need to install an Adware removal tool.
-
Download and install Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Mac. Malwarebytes is the gold standard for at-home adware removal. Click βDownloadβ and choose a location to save the file. Once it has downloaded, double-click the file to run it.
- If youβre unable to download Anti-Malware for Mac because of the adware, use a different computer to download the installer and save it to a flash drive or CD/DVD.
- The first time you run Anti-Malware for Mac, youβll likely be asked if youβre sure you want to open it. Click βOpen.β If you see a different message about your security preferences, click the Apple menu and select βSystem Preferences,β then βSecurity and Privacy.β On the General tab, click βOpen Anywayβ and the software will launch.
- The first time you run Anti-Malware, youβll be asked for a username and password for your administrator account. Type it and click βInstall Helper.β
-
Click βScan.β If Adware is found, it will display in a list after the scan is complete. Click the name of the Adware and select βRemove selected itemsβ to delete. Restart the computer and your adware should be removed.
Expert Q&A
-
QuestionWhat else can I do to remove adware?Michael Thompson-Brown is a Cybersecurity Expert based in Portland, Maine. He is the owner and founder of PCRescue!, a company that provides cybersecurity and data management solutions to small businesses and individuals. Michael has over 25 years of experience in the IT industry and is a certified ethical hacker. He is passionate about helping clients protect their data and systems from malicious attacks and helping them optimize their online presence and reach. He received a Masterβs degree in Cybersecurity and Information Assurance from Western Governors University, and a Bachelorβs degree in Business Administration from the University of Phoenix.To remove adware from your PC, consider a format and fresh install of Windows. Alternatively, newer versions of Windows include a "Reset PC" option, providing another potential solution. Begin by backing up essential data, then create a bootable USB or DVD with Windows installation media. Boot from this media, format the hard drive, and install Windows anew. For those opting for the "Reset PC" option, follow the on-screen instructions to reset Windows while keeping personal files intact. Ensure all updates and drivers are installed for optimal performance, and finally, restore backed-up data to complete the process.
-
QuestionI'm downloading MalwareFox and it says that this type of file can harm your computer. Should I download it anyway? It seems safe.Community AnswerI'd suggest Malwarebytes, Defender, Avast or others with a good reputation.
-
QuestionHow can I trust adware removal sites?Community AnswerIt's not always possible to tell if a site is legitimate. Make sure it is a trusted brand like Macafee or Norton. Some others are Malwarebytes and Microsoft has its own defense software called Windows Defender, which you can find in the Control Panel. You could check tech forums to find out which other adware removal programs people recommend or tell you to avoid, or you could leave a question on such forums if they haven't already addressed your concerns.
Video
Tips
- Never download software from a website you donβt trust.Thanks
- Update your anti-virus/anti-malware software frequently.Thanks
- Protect your computer from all forms of malware by using anti-virus protection.Thanks
Warnings
- Adware is often βcaughtβ when computer users see pop-up messages on their screen that say something like βWarning! Your computer is infected!β No reputable anti-malware software will provide a message in your web browserβreal alerts will show up in a separate window that has the name of your anti-malware software at the top, or in a notification pop-up on your Windows taskbar.Thanks
- If the above methods don't work, you may want to take your computer to an expert for an assessment.Thanks
Expert Interview

Thanks for reading our article! If youβd like to learn more about it security, check out our in-depth interview with Michael Thompson-Brown .
References
- β https://support.norton.com/sp/en/us/home/current/solutions/kb20100811171926EN_EndUserProfile_en_us
- β http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-10/repair-or-remove-programs#v1h=tab01
- β https://www.symantec.com/security_response/landing/azlisting.jsp
- β https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT203987
About This Article
Reader Success Stories
- "I was just looking for how to remove a site I installed to be my default browser (TelevisionFantastic) in order to enable me to download movies, but it turned out not to be of any use. Looking for that I found out how to remove add-ons and malware." ..." more