Mouse pointer on Dell laptop moves on its own

My mouse moves on its own when I don't touch it at all.

I have a Dell laptop which I've read sometimes has this problem but I use a wireless mouse and I turned it off, unplugged it, and it's not the mouse that is doing it. It tends to go to the bottom left and drift up sometimes to the top right and it always does this.

It was working fine a couple of days ago but this problem showed up. And yes, this HAS happened before but it suddenly stopped and now it's back. I'm not sure how to fix it and it is really irritating.

Any suggestions that I could use to fix this?


You said this is a Dell laptop?

If your laptop has a touchpad, could you please disable the touchpad on the laptop and let us know your if the problem continues?

To disable the touchpad, follow these steps:

  1. Go to Windows Control Panel, and then click Mouse.
  2. In the Mouse Properties window, click the Device Select tab to disable the touch pad and track stick.
  3. Click the Touch Pad tab to adjust touch pad and track stick settings.
  4. Click OK to save the settings and close the window.

Source is: http://support.dell.com/support/edocs/systems/latd820/en/ug/keyboard.htm#wp1050951

Another guide that might help others do this for other types of dell laptops (although the software might have changed since then..) is http://www.killertechtips.com/2009/04/30/disable-touchpad-dell


Problem is in TRACK STICK, not touchpad per se.

In Dell Latitude E6400, the following fix was found. Problem was very bad, cursor pulled off to side even in the system bios. We still have no fix for that part. Once windows starts, use keyboard navigations. There is in the Control Panel a Mouse item, choose that, wander through settings until you get to the thing where you can disable the track STICK.

In this system, we sometimes could get a USB mouse to work, so we could use the machine, but that required a BIOS setting that disabled the touchpad while USB mouse was installed. You may try that in order to start windows and then change your mouse settings. However, once you disable that stupid track stick, then you can turn on touchpad.

Also, in Win 7 mouse settings, I found an option to use software to turn off touchpad while mouse is installed. That helps quite a bit, inserting the use mouse brings up a warning.

I got no satisfaction from dell on this. THey did replace the touchpad in the end of the warranty period, but trouble with drift began after that, and their answer was "too late for you". Too bad. Will buy Mac or Sony or other hardware next time.


I had a similar problem with a Dell Inspiron e1505. I had a replacement charger for the laptop, but apparently it caused some interference and is on its way to a recycler.

As soon as I unplugged the charger and the laptop ran off of battery power, insto presto, no more crazy or unresponsive track pad. Weird huh? Try this first.


My Toshiba Accupoint stops drifting if I put a cold pack (from my freezer) underneath.

No more drift at all.