Free Tech Tutor exists for one reason: to help you fix the everyday tech problems that get in your way, without the cost, the clutter, or the confusion. When your laptop won’t connect to Wi-Fi, your phone won’t update, or a setting has mysteriously changed overnight, you shouldn’t have to wade through pop-ups, paywalls, and ten paragraphs of filler to find the one thing that actually works. That’s the gap we set out to close.
What Free Tech Tutor Is
Free Tech Tutor is a free consumer-tech help site. We publish clear, step-by-step guides for the devices and services people use every day, including:
- Windows 11 settings, updates, and troubleshooting
- Android phones and tablets
- iPhone and iPad (iOS and iPadOS)
- Web browsers like Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and Safari
- Wi-Fi, routers, and general internet connection problems
- Email and cloud services
- Online security, privacy, and account safety
- AI tools and how to get the most out of them
Every article is written to be followed start to finish. We tell you where to tap, what to click, and what you should expect to see at each step, so you’re never left guessing whether something worked.
Who Writes Our Guides
Our content comes from the Free Tech Tutor editorial team, a group of writers and editors with hands-on troubleshooting experience across phones, computers, and home networks. We’re not interested in pretending to be a single all-knowing expert. What we can promise is process: every guide is researched, written, and then checked against how the software actually behaves on real devices.
That means when we describe a menu in Windows 11, a toggle in Android Settings, or a screen in iOS, we’ve worked through those steps ourselves rather than copying them from somewhere else. If a feature looks different on your version than it does in our guide, we’d rather tell you that up front than send you hunting for a button that isn’t there.
Our Promise
We hold ourselves to a few simple rules that shape everything we publish:
- Free, always. Our guides are free to read. No locked steps, no “premium fix” upsell at the end.
- Light on jargon. We explain things in plain language. When a technical term is unavoidable, we define it.
- No fabricated steps. We don’t make up menu paths or invent options to fill space. If a step exists in our guide, it exists on the device.
- Version-agnostic where possible. Software changes constantly, so we aim to write instructions that hold up across updates and note when something is specific to a particular version.
How We Keep Guides Accurate
Technology doesn’t sit still, and neither do we. Operating systems get updated, settings get renamed, and buttons move. To keep up, we test guides against current Windows, Android, and iOS behavior, revisit popular articles when major updates land, and correct anything that’s drifted out of date. When you reach the end of a guide, you’ll see a “Last updated” date so you know how fresh the information is.
We describe exactly how we research, test, and revise our content in our Editorial Policy. If you ever spot a step that no longer matches what you see on screen, that page also explains how corrections are handled.
Get in Touch
We genuinely want to hear from you, whether you’ve found a guide helpful, noticed something that needs fixing, or have a tech problem you’d like us to cover next. You can reach us through our Contact page or by emailing contact@freetechtutor.com. Your feedback is one of the main ways we decide what to write and what to improve, so don’t be shy.
Last updated: June 21, 2026