Wednesday, 21 January 2026

 

Linux Operating System UBUNTU 25 _ INTEL DZ68DB Motherboard _ Bluetooth USB Dongle _ Bluetooth Headset _  Trouble shooting why cannot connect to my Bluetooth Headset ???!!!

 

Question 

Hi Copilot , I cannot connect my Bluetooth headset to my PC/Desktop that is running UBUNTU 25 ........ I have a Bluetooh USB dongle connected to my PC/Desktop that is running UBUNTU 25 and when I "ON" the Bluetooth setting on my PC/Desktop that is running UBUNTU 25 ........ it scan and scan and scan but it is not detecting my Bluetooth Headset ? Copilot , what could go wrong here ? Could you please help me in this Copilot ? THANKS.

 

MICROSOFT Copilot Answer 

 

 

Thanks for explaining the situation so clearly — let’s break down what might be happening with your Bluetooth headset on Ubuntu 25.


🔍 Common causes when Bluetooth scanning doesn’t detect devices

  • Bluetooth service not running: Even if the settings panel is open, the underlying bluetoothd service may not be active.
  • Missing drivers for the USB dongle: Some dongles need extra firmware or kernel modules. Windows often bundles these automatically, but Ubuntu may not.
  • Headset not in pairing mode: Many Bluetooth headsets only broadcast when explicitly put into pairing mode (usually holding the power button until a flashing light appears).
  • Conflicting Bluetooth stacks: Ubuntu uses BlueZ. If another tool (like blueman or GNOME Bluetooth) isn’t configured properly, devices may not show up.
  • Dongle compatibility: Not all USB Bluetooth dongles are fully supported by Linux. Some cheap ones only support Windows drivers.

🛠️ Steps to troubleshoot

  1. Check if Bluetooth service is running
    In Terminal:

    systemctl status bluetooth
    

    If it’s inactive, start it:

    sudo systemctl start bluetooth
    sudo systemctl enable bluetooth
    
  2. Install Bluetooth utilities
    Make sure you have the necessary packages:

    sudo apt update
    sudo apt install bluez blueman
    
    • bluez → core Bluetooth stack
    • blueman → GUI manager, often more reliable than GNOME’s default tool
  3. Verify dongle detection
    Run:

    lsusb
    

    Look for your Bluetooth dongle in the list. If it doesn’t appear, Ubuntu isn’t seeing it at all (driver issue).

  4. Put headset into pairing mode

    • Hold down the power or pairing button until the LED flashes (usually blue/red).
    • Then try scanning again from Ubuntu.
  5. Pair manually via Terminal (if GUI fails)

    bluetoothctl
    

    Inside the prompt:

    power on
    agent on
    scan on
    pair <MAC address>
    connect <MAC address>
    

    Replace <MAC address> with the one shown during scanning.

  6. Check audio profile
    Even if paired, sometimes audio won’t work until you set the profile to A2DP (High Fidelity Playback) in sound settings.


⚡ Why Windows works but Ubuntu doesn’t

Windows drivers are bundled with many dongles, while Ubuntu relies on open‑source support. If your dongle uses a chipset with poor Linux support, detection can fail. That’s why installing bluez and blueman often helps, but in some cases you may need a Linux‑friendly dongle (CSR or Broadcom chipsets are usually safe bets).


Would you like me to guide you through checking whether your Bluetooth dongle is recognized by Ubuntu first, before diving into headset pairing? That’s usually the most critical step.

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