Camera access is exclusive on most systems. Press Ctrl+Shift+Esc to open Task Manager → Look for camera-using apps like Teams, Skype, Discord, OBS, Chrome (with camera tabs), and FaceTime. Right-click and "End task" for any that are running. Then restart Zoom and try enabling video.
Go to Settings → Privacy & Security → Camera. Make sure "Let apps access your camera" is enabled at the top. Scroll down to "Let desktop apps access your camera" and ensure it's on. Find "Zoom" in the list and enable it.
In Zoom: click the arrow next to the video camera button (top right of video area) → Select Camera → Choose your correct camera from the dropdown. If you have multiple cameras (built-in laptop camera + external webcam), Zoom may be pointing to the wrong one.
Press Win + X → Device Manager → Expand "Cameras" → Right-click your camera → "Update driver" → "Search automatically for drivers". If the issue persists, right-click → "Uninstall device" → Restart PC to reinstall automatically.
In Zoom: click your profile photo → "Check for Updates" → "Download and Install" if available. Old Zoom versions can have camera compatibility bugs that are fixed in newer releases.
Open the pre-installed Windows Camera app (search "Camera" in Start menu). If it shows a black screen or error, the issue is with your camera itself, not Zoom. Try the Device Manager troubleshooting above.
Go to System Settings → Privacy & Security → Camera. Toggle ON Zoom. If Zoom isn't listed, start a test meeting at zoom.us/test — this will trigger the permission prompt. Click "Allow" when asked.
Force quit FaceTime, Photo Booth, and any browser with camera access: Press Cmd+Option+Esc → select app → "Force Quit". Only one app can use the camera at a time on Mac. Also check menu bar for video call indicators.
If using Zoom in browser: Safari → Settings → Camera → Select "Ask" or "Allow" for zoom.us. Chrome → Settings → Privacy → Site Settings → Camera → Allow zoom.us.
Shut down your Mac → hold Shift+Control+Option+Power for 10 seconds → Release all keys → Turn on. SMC controls hardware components including the camera. Skip this on Apple Silicon Macs (M1/M2) — just restart normally.
Download Zoom's official uninstaller at zoom.us/download, run it, then reinstall the latest version. This resets all Zoom settings and permissions.
Go to Settings → Privacy & Security → Camera. Scroll down and enable Zoom. Then open Zoom, join a meeting, and tap the video button to enable camera.
Swipe up from bottom (iPhone with Face ID) or double-press home button (iPhone with Home button) → Swipe up on Zoom to close → Reopen the app.
Go to Settings → General → Software Update. Apple frequently fixes camera bugs in iOS updates. Make sure you're on the latest iOS version.
Hold power + volume down → Slide to power off → Turn back on. A restart fixes most temporary app and camera glitches.
Go to Settings → Apps → Zoom → Permissions. Tap "Camera" and select "Allow". Also check Settings → Privacy → Camera to ensure camera access is enabled globally.
Close any other apps using the camera (Snapchat, Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, Teams) before opening Zoom. Android also has exclusive camera access — only one app can use it at a time.
Open Play Store → Search Zoom → Tap "Update". Older Android versions of Zoom may have camera bugs fixed in newer releases.
Go to Settings → Apps → Zoom → Storage. Tap "Clear Cache". If problems persist, tap "Clear Data" (this will require you to sign in again).
If using an external webcam (Logitech, Razer, etc.): unplug and replug the USB connector, try a different USB port (preferably USB 3.0 on the back of your PC), check Device Manager to see if it's recognized, and install the manufacturer's software.
For Logitech webcams, download Logitech G HUB or Logitech Camera Settings from logitech.com. For other brands, search for "[brand] camera settings" and download their software.
This usually means another participant or the host has disabled video for everyone, or your video was muted when joining. In the meeting, click the video camera icon at the bottom left to enable your video.
Black screen usually occurs when another app is using the camera, camera permissions are denied, or there's a driver issue. Close other apps, check permissions in Settings, and try updating your camera driver.
This error appears when Zoom can't access your camera. Check that camera permissions are granted in your OS, close other apps using the camera, and make sure your camera is selected correctly in Zoom settings.
Yes! You can join meetings with audio only. Click "Join Audio" when prompted, or click the microphone and camera icons to remain muted and without video. You can also blur your background or use a virtual background.
Poor video quality is usually due to slow internet, not camera issues. Try moving closer to your Wi-Fi router, using a wired connection, closing other bandwidth-heavy applications, or reducing video quality in Zoom settings.