Confirm the drift
Check whether the stick moves while untouched and identify which analog stick is affected.
Free stick drift guide
Test analog stick drift, find what is causing unwanted movement, and apply the right fix before you open or replace your controller.
The quick answer
Start by testing the controller to confirm that it is sending input while the analog sticks are untouched. Then update or reconnect the controller, clean around the stick and recalibrate its input. DriftAline can help correct centre-point offset, smooth unstable readings and reduce unwanted movement before you consider hardware repair or replacement.
Check whether the stick moves while untouched and identify which analog stick is affected.
Determine whether the problem is caused by centre offset, unstable input, dirt, calibration or physical wear.
Try connection, firmware, cleaning and software correction before moving on to controller repair or replacement.
Diagnose the problem first
Before cleaning, recalibrating or replacing your controller, use a stick drift test to confirm what the analog stick is actually doing while untouched. This helps you choose the right fix instead of changing settings at random.
Before you fix anything
What the test should reveal
Check the left and right analog sticks separately so you know exactly which input is causing the unwanted movement.
Measure whether the resting input is a small centre offset or a larger movement that may interfere with normal gameplay.
A steady offset and a constantly fluctuating signal can have different causes and may require different types of correction.
Release the stick after moving it in several directions and check whether it consistently returns near its expected neutral position.
Testing does not change your controller settings. It gives you a clearer picture of the problem before you try connection fixes, cleaning, calibration, software correction or hardware repair.
Understand the problem
Stick drift is not always caused by a completely damaged joystick. A controller may develop a small centre-point offset, produce unstable analog input or be affected by dirt, worn components, firmware or calibration problems. Identifying the likely cause helps you choose the right fix instead of replacing the controller too soon.
Common causes
What can trigger stick drift
The analog stick does not return accurately to its expected neutral position. The controller may then send a steady directional input even though the stick appears to be resting.
Often appears as constant movement
Instead of remaining steady, the controller sends small fluctuating values while the stick is untouched. This can appear as jitter, camera movement or unpredictable changes in direction.
Often appears as noisy input
Dust, residue or small particles around the joystick mechanism may interfere with smooth movement or prevent the stick from returning consistently toward the centre.
May affect physical movement
Internal mechanical or electrical parts can deteriorate through use. Physical wear may cause a larger centre offset, inconsistent range or movement that software correction cannot fully resolve.
May eventually require repair
Some apparent controller drift may be linked to outdated firmware, incorrect calibration, connection issues or software interpreting the neutral position incorrectly rather than permanent damage.
Check software before hardware
Start with the safest options
Follow these steps in order and retest after each one. That way you know what actually helped instead of changing several things at once.
See which stick is affected and how the input behaves while untouched before you change cables, settings or hardware.
Steps 2 to 4
Quick software checks
Reconnect the controller, try another USB port or cable, or re-pair Bluetooth to rule out temporary connection issues.
Install official firmware updates, restart the controller and retest before moving on.
Use the official reset method for your PlayStation, Xbox or Nintendo controller, then retest.
Steps 5 to 7
If the drift continues
Power off and gently clean the stick base. Do not spray liquid inside or open the controller without understanding the risk.
DriftAline corrects centre offset and smooths unstable analog input when the controller is still usable.
Choose repair or replacement only when wear or damage cannot be corrected reliably in software.
Software-based correction
DriftAline is more than a basic deadzone tool. It analyses how the analog stick behaves, identifies unwanted resting input and applies controller-specific correction to improve the way unstable or inaccurate input is interpreted on PS5, Xbox and PC controllers.
DriftAline gives you a practical first step when controller stick drift is linked to an inaccurate centre position, unstable analog readings or inconsistent stick behaviour. Reduce unwanted movement, then retest with the stick drift test before deciding whether hardware repair is necessary.
Measure the analog stick's resting position, movement and input stability.
Adjust the centre point, range and noisy input according to the controller's behaviour.
Check whether unwanted movement has been reduced before making further changes.
Core capabilities
Identifies unwanted analog stick input while the controller is resting so you can confirm which stick is affected and how the input behaves.
Compensates for an inaccurate neutral position when the analog stick consistently rests away from its expected centre point.
Improves inconsistent analog stick range and shape so movement can be interpreted more evenly across different directions.
Reduces unstable or jittery analog readings that can cause small, unpredictable camera or character movement during gameplay.
Guides centre and range adjustment so the software can understand how your specific controller moves and returns to rest.
Improves how noisy controller input is interpreted, helping separate meaningful stick movement from small unwanted fluctuations.
Controller-specific guidance
The basic troubleshooting process is similar across most controllers, but firmware updates, resets, connections and calibration methods can vary by platform. Start with the general steps on this page, then follow instructions written for your specific controller model.
Diagnose unwanted DualSense analog stick movement, check controller firmware, reconnect or reset the controller and test whether centre correction improves the input.
Test Xbox controller drift, check USB or Bluetooth connections, install available firmware updates and assess whether calibration or software correction reduces the movement.
Check DualShock 4 analog stick behaviour, reconnect or reset the controller and compare its resting input before and after cleaning or software-based correction.
Rule out USB, Bluetooth, driver and input-detection problems before adjusting controller calibration, centre correction or input smoothing on Windows.
Test the controller's resting input and follow Nintendo-supported calibration and troubleshooting steps before considering repair or replacement.
Your next step
Use the free DriftAline stick drift test to measure the problem, then download DriftAline to reduce unwanted controller movement through centre correction, calibration and input processing before considering hardware repair or replacement.