Here’s a clear, step‑by‑step guide for how to connect smart TV to WiFi , plus common fixes if it won’t connect.

Quick Scoop

Most smart TVs connect to WiFi through the Settings menu: you open Network/Connections, pick your WiFi name, enter the password, and confirm the connection. If that doesn’t work, simple fixes like restarting the TV and router or checking the password usually solve the problem.

Basic steps (works on most brands)

The exact names of menus differ (Samsung, LG, Sony, TCL, etc.), but the flow is very similar.

  1. Turn on the TV
    • Use the remote or the power button on the TV.
  1. Open Settings
    • Press the Home, Menu, or Settings button on the remote.
    • Look for a menu called Settings , All Settings , or System.
  1. Go to Network / Connections
    • Open Network , Connections , or Network & Internet.
 * Choose **Network Settings** , **Open Network Settings** , or **Network Setup**.
  1. Choose WiFi (Wireless)
    • Select Wireless , WiFi , or Wireless connection as the network type.
 * The TV scans and shows nearby WiFi networks.
  1. Select your WiFi name
    • Pick your home network (SSID) from the list.
 * If it doesn’t appear, you may need to move the router closer or type the network name manually.
  1. Enter the WiFi password
    • Use the on‑screen keyboard to type your WiFi password carefully.
 * WiFi passwords are case‑sensitive, so `Password123` is not the same as `password123`.
 * Select Done/OK/Connect.
  1. Confirm the connection
    • Many TVs run a short network test and then show “Connected”.
 * Open an app like YouTube or Netflix to make sure the internet works.

Brand‑style example (Samsung‑like menu)

This is a typical path on a recent Samsung‑style interface, which is similar to many modern TVs:

  1. Press Home on the remote.
  2. Go to Settings → All Settings.
  3. Open Connection → Network.
  4. Select Open Network Settings.
  5. Choose Wireless.
  6. Pick your WiFi network from the list and enter the password.
  7. Choose Done , then OK , and wait for the TV to confirm that it’s online.

Even if you don’t have a Samsung, following this “Home → Settings → Network → WiFi → Your network → Password” pattern usually works.

If your smart TV won’t connect

If you followed the steps and it still won’t connect, try these quick fixes before calling support.

Quick fixes

  • Restart the TV
    • Turn it off, unplug it for about 30 seconds, then plug back in and retry WiFi.
  • Restart the router
    • Unplug the router for 30–60 seconds, plug it back in, wait until all lights are stable, then try connecting again.
  • Move TV or router closer
    • Keep the router in a central spot and not too far (often within about 10–15 meters indoors).
* Avoid thick walls, metal racks, or closed cabinets between them.
  • Double‑check password
    • Make sure you’re using the right WiFi password (not the router’s admin password).
* If your TV shows a “show password” eye icon, use it so you can see what you typed.
  • Check 2.4 GHz vs 5 GHz
    • Some older TVs only see 2.4 GHz networks, not 5 GHz.
* If you only see one of your two WiFi names, connect to the one the TV can detect.

Special case: hotel / public WiFi

Public WiFi (like in hotels, dorms, cafés) often needs you to accept terms or log in on a web page (captive portal).

Some options users report:

  • Portal notification on TV
    • After choosing the WiFi network, check for a small notification or icon on the TV that lets you open a sign‑in page and finish login.
  • Use the TV’s browser
    • Go to Network Status or similar, find the “gateway” address (like 192.168.x.x), and type that into the TV’s browser to reach the login page.
  • Use your phone’s hotspot
    • If the captive portal is too tricky, turn your phone into a mobile hotspot and connect the TV to that instead (watch your data usage).

What if the TV isn’t really “smart”?

If your TV does not have WiFi or a Network menu, it may be a regular (non‑smart) TV. In that case, you need an extra device:

  • Streaming stick (Roku, Fire TV, Chromecast, etc.)
  • Game console (PlayStation, Xbox)
  • Streaming box (Apple TV, Android TV box)

You plug the device into HDMI, connect the device itself to WiFi, and then you can stream apps on your “dumb” TV.

Mini HTML table: common problems and quick fixes

html

<table>
  <tr>
    <th>Problem</th>
    <th>Likely cause</th>
    <th>Quick fix</th>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>WiFi network not showing</td>
    <td>Router too far, turned off, or on unsupported band</td>
    <td>Move router closer, power-cycle it, ensure 2.4 GHz is enabled</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>“Incorrect password” error</td>
    <td>Typing mistake, wrong network, case sensitivity</td>
    <td>Use “show password” if available, retype carefully, confirm correct WiFi name</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>TV says connected but apps don’t work</td>
    <td>Internet outage or router issue</td>
    <td>Restart router, test internet on your phone or laptop</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>Works at home, not in hotel</td>
    <td>Captive portal / login page</td>
    <td>Look for sign-in notification, open TV browser to gateway, or use phone hotspot</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>No Network/WiFi option in Settings</td>
    <td>TV isn’t a smart TV or lacks WiFi</td>
    <td>Use a streaming stick or box to add WiFi streaming</td>
  </tr>
</table>

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  • Focus phrase: how to connect smart TV to WiFi in title, first paragraph, and 1–2 sub‑headings.
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TL;DR: Open TV Settings → Network → WiFi, choose your WiFi, enter the password, and confirm with a quick app test; if it fails, restart TV/router, recheck password, move closer, or use a streaming device if the TV isn’t truly smart.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.