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How to Turn on HDR in Windows

High Dynamic Range (HDR) provides more detailed colors, either in video or in rendering. To use HDR, you need a supported monitor and a supported graphics card; provided you have those, you can enable HDR freely in settings.

Method 1
Method 1 of 4:

Enabling HDR in Settings

  1. This app icon consists of a gear. You can also open Settings by going to Start and typing Settings into the search box.
  2. This setting is at Home > Display.
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  3. Depending on the HDR capability of your device, this will either read "HDR" or "Use HDR".
  4. This will turn HDR on. Your display may refresh while the setting is changed.
  5. This will automatically enhance supported DirectX games to use the HDR function.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 4:

Enabling HDR in Game Bar

  1. This will open the Xbox Game Bar.
  2. Select the settingsgear from the Xbox Game Bar.
  3. If your configuration supports HDR, there will be a tab to turn the feature on.
  4. You can also press Win + Alt + B anywhere to enable and disable HDR. Your display may refresh while the setting is changed.
  5. This will automatically enhance supported DirectX games to use the HDR function.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 4:

Enabling HDR In-Game

  1. Depending on the game, it could be in the pause menu or on the main menu.
  2. This will usually be allocated to a specific tab.
  3. This may, among increasing refresh rate and render resolution, enable HDR, although the details depend on the game.
  4. This will usually be by game. It may be in "color rendering".
  5. The game may need a restart but once it is restarted the game should have HDR quality. Note that you will need to have HDR enabled in Windows Settings to use it.
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Method 4
Method 4 of 4:

Fixing Problems

  1. Monitors on many gaming and professional laptops, including the Razer Blade and the Surface Laptop Studio, support HDR. If your monitor does not support HDR, you should get one that does.
  2. For example, some computers only support HDR when connected to dedicated graphics. If you don't use a supported graphics card, the setting will not appear.
  3. Some monitors have a setting for color saturation. If colors still look muted even after enabling HDR, it is possible that you don't have HDR enabled on your monitor.
  4. If there is a problem with HDR support with your graphics card, you may need to reinstall the driver. This may remove HDR profiles, but you can always add them back later.
  5. HDR content is usually disabled on battery saver. Depending on your HDR settings, you might need to enable HDR streaming and rendering on battery power.
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