In this guide, I’ll walk you through how to identify your wireless card and install the correct driver—no advanced Linux degree required. Ubuntu can’t install the right driver if it doesn’t know what hardware you have. Open a terminal ( Ctrl + Alt + T ) and run:

Also try:

For (very common on HP and Lenovo laptops):

ip a # or nmcli device status You should see wlan0 or similar. Click the network icon—your Wi-Fi networks should now appear. Before buying a laptop or USB Wi-Fi adapter for Ubuntu, Google the chipset + Ubuntu . Intel Wi-Fi 6 (AX200/AX210) works flawlessly. Realtek often causes headaches, and Broadcom is a gamble.

sudo apt update sudo apt install git dkms build-essential git clone https://github.com/tomaspinho/rtl8821ce.git cd rtl8821ce sudo ./dkms-install.sh sudo modprobe 8821ce For (USB adapters for dual-band 5GHz):

sudo dmesg | grep -i firmware If you see messages about missing firmware files, the driver is trying to work but lacks proprietary blobs.

If you’re stuck, don’t spend days fighting drivers. A $20 USB Wi-Fi adapter with an chipset (like the Panda Wireless PAU06) will save your sanity—and it works out of the box.

sudo modprobe <driver_name> # e.g., modprobe wl or modprobe 8821ce sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager Then check if Wi-Fi appears:

This guide was tested on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS and 24.04 LTS. Commands may vary slightly on older or non-LTS releases.