4 Responses to “6 ways to restore the original MAC address of your network card”

  • l. prosky says:

    Thanks for such a thorough explanation of changing MAC addresses.
    My personal preference is “Spoof-Me-Now” because of simplicity, no octet restrictions and inserting new MAC as 12 successive hexadecimal characters is so straightforward.
    NEW RESTRICTIONS seem to have come into play recently, though.
    The following 3 adapters were not able to be changed with any method known to me. There are many more than these:
    Comfast #CF-WU783AC (RTK8814AU)
    TP-Link TX20U Plus
    TP-Link T2U Plus
    It appears, right now, they block any attempt to change the MAC address. Any attempt (on Win10) shows “successfully changed”, NEW MAC shows in registry, BUT ONLY the OEM MAC address is detected by my Access Point.
    After researching, I saw many similar reports at forums and Q&A sites. I hope ways can be found to change the MAC addresses of some the newer adapters coming out. Rewriting/reflashing adapter OEM MAC addresses seems beyond most user’s abilities, including me!

  • user1 says:

    working !

  • Jane says:

    For some reason I don’t see “Network Address” under “Advanced” tab. Is there a way to restore this value (some registry tweak, perhaps)?

  • sundar says:

    I changed my system mac addredd. And it doesnot restore the original address

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