My computer screen suddenly has a pink tint, and I’m not sure what’s causing it. Could this be related to a loose cable, display settings, graphics driver issues, or a hardware problem with the monitor? What troubleshooting steps can I follow to identify the cause and restore the normal screen colors?
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A pink tint on a PC screen usually happens because of a display connection issue, wrong color settings, graphics driver problem, or sometimes a failing monitor/GPU.
First, check the monitor cable properly. Remove and reconnect the HDMI, VGA, DisplayPort, or USB-C cable from both sides. If possible, try another cable or another port. A loose or damaged cable is one of the most common reasons for pink, purple, or strange screen colors.
Next, restart the PC and check display settings. Make sure Night Light, color filters, or any custom color profile is turned off. You can also reset the monitor’s color settings from the monitor menu.
After that, update or reinstall your graphics driver from Device Manager or from the official NVIDIA, AMD, or Intel website. If the problem started after a driver update, rolling back the driver may also help.
To identify the real cause, connect the monitor to another PC or connect your PC to another monitor/TV. If the pink tint appears only on one monitor, the monitor or cable may be the issue. If it appears on every display, the problem may be with the graphics card, driver, or PC hardware.
In most cases, changing the cable, resetting display settings, or updating the graphics driver fixes the issue.
A sudden pink tint on a PC screen is usually caused by either a cable/connection issue, a display setting change, a graphics driver problem, or a failing display/monitor component. The good news is you can narrow it down fairly quickly.
1. Check cable and connection first (very common)
A loose or damaged cable (HDMI/DisplayPort/VGA) can cause missing color channels, which often shows up as a pink/purple tint.
Turn off the PC and firmly reconnect both ends of the cable
Try a different cable if possible
If you’re using a desktop, also try a different port on the GPU/monitor
2. Test if it’s software or hardware
Restart and check if the pink tint appears in the BIOS/boot screen:
If it’s pink even before Windows loads → likely hardware (monitor/cable/GPU output)
If it appears only after Windows starts → likely software/driver/settings
3. Check display settings
Sometimes color settings get changed accidentally:
Disable Night light / blue light filter in Windows 10/11
Reset any custom color profiles in display settings
Check GPU control panels for color adjustments:
NVIDIA Control Panel
AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition
Intel Graphics Command Center
4. Update or reinstall graphics drivers
A corrupted or buggy driver can distort colors.
Update your GPU driver or reinstall it cleanly if needed.
5. Rule out monitor hardware issue
If none of the above helps and the tint is still present even across devices or inputs, the monitor itself could be failing (panel or internal circuitry).
Quick summary:
Most common fix: loose/failed cable
Next most common: color settings or driver issue
Less common: monitor or GPU hardware fault
If you can test with another monitor or cable, that’s the fastest way to pinpoint the cause.