Quick fix: Quick Settings is the panel that opens when you click Wi-Fi/sound/battery in system tray. It auto-opens with Win + A. To customize which controls appear: open Quick Settings → click the pencil/edit icon → toggle individual controls (Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Battery saver, Night light, Cast, etc.). To make Quick Settings instantly accessible: use the keyboard shortcut.
Quick Settings in Windows 11 replaced Windows 10’s Action Center. It opens when you click any system-tray status icon, or via Win+A. It can’t be “pinned to taskbar” in the literal sense, but you can customize its contents and shortcuts.
Affects: Windows 11.
Fix time: ~5 minutes.
What causes this
Quick Settings is a flyout panel, not a taskbar button. It opens from the system tray cluster (Wi-Fi/Sound/Battery icons grouped together). The flyout shows toggleable tiles: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Battery saver, Airplane mode, Focus, Night light, Project, Connect, etc. You can customize which tiles appear and their order, but the flyout itself is not a pinnable taskbar item.
Method 1: Customize Quick Settings tiles
The standard route.
- Open Quick Settings: click the Wi-Fi or volume icon in system tray. Or press
Win + A. - Click the pencil/edit icon (top right of the flyout).
- Quick Settings enters edit mode. Each tile has an unpin button (X icon).
- To remove a tile: click its X. To add: click Add button at the bottom. Pick from available tiles.
- To reorder: drag tiles within the flyout.
- Common tiles to add:
- Wi-Fi — on/off and network picker
- Bluetooth — on/off and paired devices
- Battery saver — toggle
- Focus — start/end focus session
- Night light — toggle blue-light filter
- Accessibility — magnifier, narrator, etc.
- Project — multi-monitor setup
- Cast — wireless display
- Click Done when finished. Customization persists.
This is the standard customization.
Method 2: Use keyboard shortcuts for instant access
For faster access than clicking.
- Open Quick Settings:
Win + A. - Open Notifications:
Win + N. - Open Action Center (Windows 10): combined Quick Settings + Notifications via
Win + A. - Open Settings:
Win + I. - Open Network & Internet directly: not a hotkey, but pin it: Settings → Network & Internet → right-click in Start menu → Pin to Start or Pin to taskbar (for the Settings app icon).
- For ultra-fast Wi-Fi/Bluetooth toggle: pin specific Settings pages. Windows + R →
ms-settings:bluetooth. Or create desktop shortcuts to ms-settings URLs.
This is the right path for keyboard-first users.
Method 3: Use third-party tools for Quick Settings replacement
For richer control panel-style access.
- Install PowerToys from Microsoft Store. Multiple utilities, free.
- Enable Quick Accent, Mouse Without Borders, or other PowerToys utilities.
- For full Action Center replacement: ElevenClock on the clock area can include extra info.
- For dedicated quick-launcher: Wox, Flow Launcher, PowerToys Run (Ctrl+Space). Type to find anything — settings pages, apps, files.
- For taskbar customization beyond Quick Settings: Taskbar Customizer from various GitHub developers.
- For toggle-everything from taskbar: pin Settings as taskbar app + use jump list. Right-click Settings on taskbar shows recent pages.
This is the right path for users who want more than Quick Settings offers.
How to verify the fix worked
- Open Quick Settings (click tray cluster or Win+A). Your customized tiles appear.
- Toggle a setting (Wi-Fi on/off). Setting applies immediately.
- Click pencil/edit icon — tiles match your saved layout.
If none of these work
If Quick Settings won’t open or is broken: Restart Explorer: Task Manager → right-click Windows Explorer → Restart. Quick Settings is part of shell UI. Reset Settings app: Settings → Apps → Installed apps → Microsoft Settings → Advanced options → Reset. For Quick Settings showing wrong info (e.g., wrong network): Network & internet → Status → refresh. For tablet/2-in-1 with auto-detected tablet mode: Quick Settings layout differs. Check tablet mode toggle in Settings → System → Tablet. For laptops with custom OEM apps: Lenovo, Asus, HP may replace Quick Settings with their own dashboards. Disable OEM tool if Windows’s native Quick Settings is preferred.
Bottom line: Quick Settings is a flyout, not a pinnable taskbar button. Customize tiles via pencil icon. Use Win+A for instant access. PowerToys Run for richer launcher.