QMK presents itself to the host as a regular HID keyboard device, and as such requires no special drivers. However, in order to flash your keyboard on Windows, the bootloader device that appears when you reset the board often does.
There are two notable exceptions: the Caterina bootloader, usually seen on Pro Micros, and the Halfkay bootloader shipped with PJRC Teensys, appear as a serial port and a generic HID device respectively, and so do not require a driver.
We recommend the use of the Zadig utility. If you have set up the development environment with Msys2 or WSL, the qmk_install.sh
script will have asked if you want it to install the drivers for you.
Place your keyboard into the bootloader mode, either by hitting the RESET
keycode (which may be on a different layer), or by pressing the reset switch usually located on the underside of the board. If your keyboard has neither, try holding Escape, or Space+B
, as you plug it in (see the Bootmagic docs for more details).
Some keyboards may have specific instructions for entering the bootloader, for example the Bootmagic Lite key (Escape) might be on a different key, such as Left Control. Refer to the board's README if you are unsure.
Zadig will automatically detect the bootloader device. You may sometimes need to check Options -> List All Devices.
- For keyboards with Atmel AVR MCUs, the bootloader will be named something similar to
ATm32U4DFU
, and have a Vendor ID of03EB
. - USBasp bootloaders will appear as
USBasp
, with a VID/PID of16C0:05DC
. - AVR keyboards flashed with the QMK-DFU bootloader will be named
<keyboard name> Bootloader
and will also have the VID03EB
. - For most ARM keyboards, it will be called
STM32 BOOTLOADER
, and have a VID/PID of0483:DF11
.
!> If Zadig lists one or more devices with the HidUsb
driver, your keyboard is probably not in bootloader mode. The arrow will be colored orange and you will be asked to confirm modifying a system driver. Do not proceed if this is the case!
If the arrow appears green, select the driver, and click Install Driver. The libusb-win32
driver will usually work for AVR, and WinUSB
for ARM, but if you still cannot flash the board, try installing a different driver from the list.
Finally, unplug and replug the keyboard to make sure the new driver has been loaded. If you are using the QMK Toolbox to flash, exit and restart it too, as it can sometimes fail to recognize the driver change.
If you find that you can no longer type with the keyboard, you may have installed the driver onto the keyboard itself instead of the bootloader. You can easily confirm this in Zadig - a healthy keyboard has the HidUsb
driver installed on all of its interfaces:
Open the Device Manager and look for a device that looks like your keyboard.
Right-click it and hit Uninstall device. Make sure to tick Delete the driver software for this device first.
Click Action -> Scan for hardware changes. At this point, you should be able to type again. Double check in Zadig that the keyboard device(s) are using the HidUsb
driver. If so, you're all done, and your board should be functional again!