How to fix Flickering in Photoshop when G-Sync or FreeSync is enabled.

If you have recently upgraded your monitor with NVIDIA G-Sync or AMD Freesync and are now having problems with flickering in Photoshop. This article will take you through several different things you can do to solve the problem and get rid of or dramatically reduce the flickering issues in Adobe Photoshop when G-Sync or Free Sync is enabled.

Related: The Best Text to Image Generative Ais.

NVIDIA G-Sync and AMD Free Sync make a huge difference in performance and visuals in games and video content but they do come with some complications which no one ever talks about…. Depending on your hardware setup you may have slightly differing issues. For example, when I was using a GTX 1070 I had flickering issues in some games with Freesync enabled. However now that I have updated to an RTX 4070 I have flickering issues in Photoshop, Premiere Pro and pretty much all other Adobe software but not games… The problem has fully reversed…

Previously we’ve dealt with this issue occurring in games which you can check out: How to fix screen flickering when FreeSync or Gsync is enabled. For this guide though we’ll be going through all the potential solutions for flickering in Photoshop when G-Sync or Freesync is enabled. At this stage, there isn’t one single fix that works for everyone and I suspect the issue is on Windows 11 or with NVIDIA drivers but we’ll go through some of the things that do work most of the time.

How do you fix Flickering in Photoshop when G-Sync or FreeSync is enabled?

Flickering in Photoshop when G-Sync or FreeSync is enabled can be caused by a variety of factors, including issues with the graphics card, monitor settings, or the software itself. While those are all possible scenarios, I’m 99% sure the issue is Windows and Graphics Driver related.

Lock frame rates for Photoshop in NVIDIA Control Panel:

Update your graphics drivers: Use DDU (Display Driver Uninstaller)

You’ve probably already tried to uninstall your graphics drivers and GeForce Experience. However, a traditional uninstallation doesn’t seem to clear all of the problems that cause the flickering issues. This is why you need to use DDU instead.

Once you have reinstalled GeForce Experience you’ll be able to update your graphics/video drivers without any issues. If the problem returns just repeat the process again.

Disable GPU acceleration:
In Photoshop, try disabling GPU acceleration in the Performance settings to see if this resolves the flickering issue.

To do this open Photoshop and go to Edit > Preferences > Performance.
On this page untick the Use Graphics Processor option and check to see if the problem goes away.

Disable G-Sync or FreeSync:
If you’re desperate to stop this issue you can disable G-Sync or Freesync. However, this isn’t ideal as you paid good money for the feature! But it is an option if nothing so far has worked.

Adjust your monitor settings:

I’ve also noticed that this issue seems to be worse when using multiple monitors. Again this isn’t an ideal solution but disconnecting your other monitors and just using a single monitor seems to solve this problem for some people as well. Again not ideal but an option at the end of the day.

Try Disabling All of the following in Windows Settings.

  1. Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling
  2. Optimizations for windowed games
  3. Variable refresh rate

The Bad News....

Sadly there are some instances where you may not be able to fix this issue using any of the above solutions. You'll just have to wait for Windows updates and Driver updates to solve things. Annoyingly this is one of those situations that not many people are talking about. 

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