How to Track a Stolen Laptop
Do This Immediately After Discovering the Theft
Start by accessing your tracking tools from another device. If your laptop appears online, document any available location information and avoid making direct contact with anyone who may have possession of the device. Your priority should be preserving evidence, securing your accounts, and creating a record of the theft.
Tracking Options by Platform
Windows: Find My Device
Mac: Apple Find My
Prey
Absolute
If Tracking Software Was Not Installed
File a Police Report
Check Account Activity
Monitor Resale Sites
Protect Your Remaining Devices
Working With Law Enforcement
Insurance and Employer Steps
File an Insurance Claim
Contact Your Employer
Notify Your School
Document Everything
Protecting Your Data After a Laptop Theft
Change Important Passwords
Enable Two-Factor Authentication
Sign Out of Active Sessions
Consider a Remote Wipe
Frequently Asked Questions
How to track a stolen laptop depends on what tracking tools were enabled before the theft occurred. Windows users can use Find My Device, Mac users can use Apple Find My, and third-party tools such as Prey or Absolute may provide additional recovery features. If tracking software was not installed before the theft, recovery options become much more limited and typically involve police reports, account monitoring, and checking local resale marketplaces.
Police can work with tracking software providers and use information supplied by victims during an active theft investigation. Providing serial numbers, tracking screenshots, purchase records, and location data can significantly improve the chances of recovery.
Tracking typically works as long as the laptop remains powered on and connected to the internet. Many thieves attempt to disable tracking, wipe the device, or sell it quickly, which is why acting immediately after the theft is so important.
For most tracking software, yes. A factory reset or operating system reinstall can remove traditional tracking applications. Some enterprise-grade solutions use persistence technology that may continue functioning after certain types of resets.
No. Most laptop tracking tools require the device to be powered on and connected to the internet. Some services may display the last known location before the laptop went offline.
No. If tracking software identifies a location, provide that information to law enforcement. Attempting to recover a stolen laptop yourself can be dangerous and may interfere with an active investigation.