Cursor disappeared on Acer laptop
The trackpad still moves you around, you can still click — you just cannot see where the pointer is. Specific to Acer because of how their function keys are laid out. Three fixes, in order of likelihood.
Fix 1 — Press Fn + F7 (cures about half of all cases)
Acer maps the touchpad enable/disable toggle to Fn + F7 on most Aspire, Swift, and Nitro laptops. It is also extremely easy to hit by accident when reaching for F7 alone. The function key has a small touchpad-with-a-slash icon on it.
If you have an external mouse plugged in, you can use it to check whether the cursor is actually missing or just stuck off-screen — wiggle the external mouse and the cursor should appear. If it does not, the cursor really is hidden. Press Fn+F7 once. It should reappear.
Some Acer models use F6 or F8 instead. Look across your function row for the touchpad icon.
Fix 2 — Toggle "Hide cursor while typing"
Windows has a setting that hides the cursor while you are actively typing. On most machines it works correctly — the cursor reappears the moment you move the mouse — but on some Acer models it can fail to come back, leaving the cursor invisible until you toggle the setting off.
Open Settings → Bluetooth & devices → Mouse → Additional mouse settings → Pointer Options tab. Find "Hide pointer while typing". Untick it. Click OK.
If you want to keep the feature on most of the time, you can rely on Fn+F7 above to recover from the bug, but turning the setting off is more reliable.
Fix 3 — Reload the touchpad driver
If the cursor is still missing after the above:
- Press Win + X, then M to open Device Manager.
- Expand Mice and other pointing devices.
- Right-click your touchpad entry (often "ELAN Input Device", "Synaptics TouchPad" or "I2C HID Device") → Disable device.
- Wait three seconds.
- Right-click again → Enable device.
The cursor should reappear immediately.
If none of the above worked
Less common but possible:
- The cursor is on a second monitor. Press Win+P to check; if you accidentally extended display to a non-existent screen, the cursor wandered there. Pick "PC screen only" from the Project menu.
- A driver update broke the touchpad driver. Roll back: Device Manager → right-click touchpad → Properties → Driver tab → Roll Back Driver.
- BIOS setting toggled the touchpad off. Reboot, press F2 to enter BIOS, find "Touchpad" under the Main or Advanced tab, set to Enabled.
- Failed touchpad ribbon cable (rare). The ribbon connecting the touchpad to the motherboard can come loose after a fall. Requires opening the laptop to reseat.