Your PC is a giant air pump. Fans pull air through the case to cool components, and dust comes along for the ride. Over months and years, that dust accumulates on fan blades, heatsink fins, and filters — choking airflow, raising temperatures, and shortening component life. A proper cleaning every 6-12 months keeps everything running like new. Here’s how to do it right.

Signs your PC needs cleaning

  • Fans running louder than they used to at idle.
  • Higher temperatures during normal use.
  • Thermal throttling or sudden shutdowns under load.
  • Visible dust on filters or behind glass panels.
  • It’s been more than a year since you last cleaned it.

What you’ll need

  • Compressed air — either canned air or a small electric duster (worth buying — pays for itself in compressed air cans).
  • Microfiber cloth — for wiping surfaces.
  • Soft brush — a clean makeup brush, paintbrush, or anti-static brush.
  • Cotton swabs (Q-tips) — for small spaces.
  • 90%+ isopropyl alcohol — for any sticky residue.
  • Optional: a face mask if you’re sensitive to dust, and somewhere outside or near a vacuum to do this.

Do NOT use: a vacuum cleaner directly on components (the static is dangerous), water, household cleaners, or strongly scented cloths. Don’t use a leaf blower (too much force, too much static).

Step 1: power down properly

  1. Shut down the PC normally.
  2. Flip the PSU power switch off (the I/O switch on the back).
  3. Unplug the PSU from the wall.
  4. Press and hold the case power button for 5 seconds. This drains residual power from capacitors.
  5. Unplug all external cables (monitor, USB, etc.).

Step 2: move the PC somewhere dust-friendly

This is going to get messy. Move the PC to:

  • A garage or workshop.
  • An open patio or yard.
  • A bathroom with a fan running.
  • Or at minimum a room where you can vacuum afterward.

Doing this in the office or bedroom will leave dust everywhere.

Step 3: open the case

Remove both side panels. Most modern cases have thumb screws or quick-release latches.

Take a quick “before” look. Mental note: where’s the dust worst? Usually:

  • Intake filters at the front and bottom.
  • CPU heatsink fins.
  • GPU heatsink and fans.
  • Front of any radiators.
  • Around the PSU shroud.

Step 4: remove and clean the dust filters

Most cases have magnetic or sliding dust filters at the intakes (front, bottom, sometimes top). Pop these off the case completely.

Rinse them under running water if they’re severely dusty (most are washable plastic mesh). Pat dry, or let air dry. Don’t reinstall until fully dry.

For lightly dusty filters, just brush them off or shake them out.

Step 5: blow out the heatsinks

The CPU heatsink and GPU heatsink are where dust builds up most. Use compressed air in short bursts.

Important tip: hold the fans still while you blow air through them. If the fan blades spin from the compressed air, the fan acts as a generator and can produce damaging voltage. Use a finger or a thin pencil to stop the blade.

For tower-style CPU coolers, blow horizontally through the fins from one side to the other, letting the dust exit the other side.

For GPUs, blow into the fan grille and let the dust exit from the back exhaust. If the GPU is really dusty, removing it from the case gives you better access — but only do this if you’re comfortable reinstalling it.