If your laptop’s CPU is running very hot and you’ve tried to undervolt it, you’ve probably discovered there’s no easy way to do so—especially on laptops whose BIOS doesn’t expose those controls. I ran into the same issue with my Ryzen 7 5800H, despite numerous attempts, I couldn’t undervolt because the firmware simply wouldn’t allow it. While it may seem drastic, disabling Turbo Boost
is one workaround—and you might be surprised how little real-world performance you lose by turning it off.
- Heat & Noise: Aggressive boosting spins fans faster and raises CPU temperatures, often causing thermal throttling and fan noise spikes.
- Battery Life: Reducing boost levels directly cuts power draw, extending unplugged runtime.
- Workload Fit: GPU-bound games or lightweight tasks rarely need max CPU frequency, so limiting boost can be unnoticeable in practice.
- Fine-Grained Control: Beyond the basic
Enabled
/Disabled
options, Windows offers efficiency-focused and calculated-boost modes—some only visible after the registry tweak.
- Open Registry Editor: Press
Win+R
, typeregedit
, and click OK. (Be careful in the registry!) - Navigate to the Path: In the top bar of the Registry Editor, paste:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Power\PowerSettings\54533251-82be-4824-96c1-47b60b740d00\be337238-0d82-4146-a960-4f3749d470c7
- Modify Attributes: Find
Attributes
on the right side, double-click it, and change its value from1
to2
.
Now, you can control the mode:
- Search for
Edit Power Plan
in Windows search and open it. - Click
Change advanced power settings
. - Expand
Processor power management
, then expandProcessor Performance Boost Mode
. - You can now choose different
STATE/MODE
forOn Battery
andPlugged in
.
Mode | Simplified Effect | Use Case |
---|---|---|
Disabled | No boost—CPU stays at base frequency. | Laptops seeking max battery life & low heat. |
Enabled | Standard boost—OS-managed boost when needed. | Everyday use with balanced performance. |
Aggressive | Boosts readily to max frequencies, regardless of power draw. | Demanding workloads on well-cooled rigs. |
Efficient Enabled | Boosts but favors energy efficiency over raw speed. | Laptops needing mild boost without heat. |
Efficient Aggressive | Prioritizes efficiency but still seeks higher boost levels. | Mixed-use systems wanting more boost safely. |
Guaranteed performance level = the CPU’s nominal base frequency.
Mode | Simplified Effect | Use Case |
---|---|---|
Aggressive At Guaranteed | Requests a calculated extra boost above the base frequency for a precise jump. | When you want controlled high boost. |
Efficient Aggressive At Guaranteed | Same precise boost above base, but with efficiency constraints to limit power usage. | Modern systems needing strong boost with better power. |
- Ultra-quiet/cool laptops: Start with
Disabled
, then step up toEfficient Enabled
if performance lags. - Balanced desktop/laptop:
Enabled
orEfficient Aggressive At Guaranteed
offers strong performance with decent power control. - Max-performance rigs: Use
Aggressive
orAggressive At Guaranteed
—just keep an eye on thermals.
While tweaking these settings can be very beneficial, always make changes one at a time and observe your system's stability, temperatures, and performance.
About other than Enable and Aggressive there are no different either disable or enable the turbo boost, I have tested on Benchmarking and yeah got almost identical each other either Enable or DIsable the turboo boost. The Guaranteed option may not work on some Ryzen maybe, in my case is 4800H which does not respon on that option, yeah I knew I can tweak my EFI settings using some kinda hack tool called it Smokeless which I can show the hidden BIOS OEM to change some settings and I managed to limit at the safer clock in turbo boost area by changing some value on EFI using the smokeless tool. Unfortunately my battery is swollen I have to remove it and only use charger to supply the power, once the charger or electricity goes off the BIOS resets its settings so it is very tired that every time I accidently unplugged the AC power source I have to change the EFI Tweak again? so tired I wouldn't do that, the best place to go is by buying a UPS to keep retain my BIOS tweak settings overtime.
I am just looking for a workaround at least to keep my laptop silent and ueses lower power I have to use the OEM software to set the limit the CPU and is working perfectly, I may stupid being hater of redudant OEM software instaleld on my system, actually it helps a lot saving my time researching on the internet to keep my system cool and save some electricity bill.
I use my laptop as a Desktop PC replacement so if I buy a new battery it will not last long will be swollen again, I look for a good alternative like UPS may be the best deal for my setup.