Making the Fn key active so the top row works as standard F1–F12 usually requires pressing Fn + Esc or changing a BIOS setting.
A top row of keys doing nothing useful points to one likely culprit: Fn Lock is turned off. Knowing how to enable the Fn key correctly saves you a BIOS headache later, because Windows itself rarely gives you this toggle. The fix lives either in a two-key shortcut or inside your laptop’s firmware setup.
What Does “Enabling The Fn Key” Actually Mean?
Enabling the Fn key usually means toggling the Fn Lock feature. When Fn Lock is active, the top row of keys on your keyboard behaves as standard F1 through F12 keys. When it is off, those same keys perform their secondary functions — volume, brightness, play, and pause.
The Fn key itself is always working as a modifier; what you are really doing is switching how the top row defaults. The toggle is a hardware-level setting, not a Windows control panel option, which is why the usual software routes often lead to a dead end.
Enabling The Fn Key: The Step Order That Works
The method that works depends on your device’s manufacturer and model, but the sequence is almost always the same. Start with the simplest shortcut and work up to the firmware setting.
The Most Common Shortcut: Fn + Esc
Press and hold the Fn key, then tap the Esc key, then release both. On the Dell Latitude 14 Rugged Extreme 7414, for example, this toggles Fn Lock directly.Dell’s Latitude 14 Rugged Extreme 7414 Getting Started Guide confirms that this toggle turns Fn Lock on and off. The same shortcut works on many Logitech keyboards and business-class laptops from HP and Lenovo.
When the toggle works, the top row immediately switches behavior. You may see a small on-screen notification or an LED indicator on the keyboard itself.
The BIOS/UEFI Route For A System-Level Fix
If the keyboard shortcut does nothing, the setting lives in your computer’s firmware. Restart the PC and press the manufacturer’s boot menu key during startup — common keys are F2, F10, Del, or Esc.
Inside the BIOS or UEFI interface, navigate to the keyboard or advanced settings section. Look for a label such as Action Keys Mode, Function Key Behavior, or Hotkey Mode. Change the option from “Media Keys” or “Multimedia” to “Function Keys” or “Enabled,” then save and exit. The change applies system-wide and persists across Windows installs.
Checking Windows Settings And Manufacturer Tools
Some systems expose keyboard options in Windows Settings > Bluetooth & devices > Keyboard, but this is not a universal Windows feature and availability varies by PC maker and version. If you do not see an Fn Lock toggle there, the setting is not exposed through Windows.
For external keyboards and branded laptops, the manufacturer’s own utility is the next place to check. Logitech keyboards can be configured with Logi Options+, and Lenovo ThinkPads allow changes through Lenovo Vantage. These tools often provide the same Fn Lock toggle that lives in the BIOS but from inside the running OS.
Why Is My Fn Key Not Working?
A common mistake is assuming the Fn key is broken or that Windows controls its behavior. The Fn key is a hardware-level modifier managed by the keyboard’s internal firmware or the system’s UEFI. If pressing Fn + Esc yields no result, the first place to look is the correct boot key for your manufacturer (see Table 2 below).
Another common source of confusion is mixing up Fn Lock with Num Lock or accessibility keyboard settings. These control different functions. Num Lock changes the numeric keypad behavior, while Fn Lock changes the top row. They do not affect each other.
Fn Lock Methods By Platform
| Platform | Primary Method | Setup Path |
|---|---|---|
| Dell Laptops | Fn + Esc | Dell BIOS: Function Key Behavior |
| Logitech Keyboards | Fn + Esc | Logi Options+ software |
| HP Laptops | Fn + Shift | BIOS: Action Keys Mode |
| Lenovo ThinkPad | Fn + Esc | Lenovo Vantage Software |
| ASUS Laptops | Fn + Esc | BIOS: Hotkey Mode |
| Surface Keyboards | Fn + Caps | System Settings |
| Generic USB Keyboards | Dedicated Fn Lock Key | Physical hardware toggle |
BIOS/UEFI Setting Names By Brand
The exact label for the Fn Lock option inside your BIOS differs by manufacturer. This table gives you the boot key and the exact menu name to look for.
| Brand | Typical Boot Key | BIOS Option Name |
|---|---|---|
| Dell | F2 | Function Key Behavior |
| HP | F10 | Action Keys Mode |
| Lenovo | F1 or F2 | Fn Lock or Hotkey Mode |
| ASUS | F2 or Del | Hotkey Mode |
| Acer | Del | Function Key |
| Microsoft Surface | Volume Up + Power | System Firmware |
Checklist: Finish Setting Up Your Fn Key
Use this sequence to ensure the change took effect and that you have not missed a step along the way.
- Try the universal shortcut: Fn + Esc. Look for an on-screen indicator or LED light.
- Restart the PC and enter BIOS/UEFI using the boot key specific to your brand from Table 2 above.
- Locate the keyboard behavior setting and change it from “Multimedia” or “Hotkey” to “Function Keys” or “Standard.”
- Save changes and exit. The PC will reboot into Windows with the new top-row behavior.
- If the keyboard is external, update the firmware or the vendor’s utility software to ensure the toggle is available.
- Test the keys. Pressing F2 should now attempt to rename a file, and F5 should refresh the page, even without holding down the Fn key.
References & Sources
- Dell. “Enabling the Function (Fn) Lock.” Dell Latitude 14 Rugged Extreme 7414 Getting Started Guide.
- Logitech. Logi Options+ Software Official keyboard customization tool.
- Lenovo. Lenovo Vantage Official system management and keyboard configuration tool.
