If you need to loop a PowerPoint on a TV screen, the process is simpler than most people expect, but there are a few settings you must get right, or the presentation will stop advancing and wait for a click. This guide covers every method available, from a basic HDMI connection to managed signage platforms, so you can pick the one that fits your setup and runs without interruption.
Offices, retail spaces, reception areas, and warehouses all use TV screens to share information. A looping presentation is often the fastest way to display announcements, KPIs, safety reminders, or welcome messaging without building anything from scratch.
The problem is that most people set up the screen once, walk away, and come back to find it stuck on slide three waiting for input. Done correctly, a looping PowerPoint runs continuously, advances on schedule, and requires no one to babysit it.
For teams that already have presentations built, it also removes the need to reformat content for a different platform before getting it on screen.
Before configuring anything, confirm you have the following:
USB-only setups are possible in some cases but require converting the file first. That process is covered further below.
The core setting for a looping PowerPoint slideshow is called Browsed at a kiosk (full screen). This is built into PowerPoint and designed specifically for unattended displays.
To enable it:
This mode automatically enables looping behavior. Once the presentation reaches the last slide, it returns to slide one and continues playing. The only way to stop it is pressing Escape.
One important note: kiosk mode alone does not advance your slides. If you leave it here without adding timings, the deck will loop but stay frozen on the first slide indefinitely.
Slide timings tell PowerPoint how long to stay on each slide before moving to the next. Without this, nothing moves.
The quickest method:
If different slides need different durations, set each one individually rather than applying a single duration to all. Slides with more text or detailed charts often benefit from 15 to 20 seconds, while simple announcement slides can run shorter.
Alternatively, use Slide Show > Rehearse Timings to manually record how long you spend on each slide. PowerPoint saves those timings and uses them automatically during playback.
This is the most dependable method for continuous display. Connect a PC or laptop to the TV with an HDMI cable, set the TV to duplicate or extended display mode, and run the PowerPoint slideshow in full-screen mode. Kiosk mode handles the looping from there.
A mini PC is often the better choice over a full laptop for permanent installations. It sits behind the TV, draws less power, and does not require a keyboard or mouse to be visible in the room. Models like the Intel NUC or similar compact PCs are commonly used for this.
This method keeps the native PowerPoint file intact, so fonts, animations, and transitions all render exactly as designed.
Most TVs cannot open .pptx files directly from a USB drive. What they can play is video. So for a USB-based setup, you need to export the presentation as an MP4 first.
To export as a video in PowerPoint:
Once you have the MP4, copy it to a USB drive and plug it into the TV. Most TVs have a loop or repeat option in their media player settings, though the location varies by brand. Check the TV's remote or settings menu for "Repeat" when the video is playing.
The downside of this route is that any changes to the content require re-exporting the file. It also loses animations that do not translate cleanly to video at standard export settings.
Wireless display adapters work for short-term or flexible setups. You mirror your screen to the TV and run the slideshow on your device. The presentation continues to loop as long as your device stays connected and awake.
This is not ideal for unattended displays because the device needs to stay on, remain connected to the same network, and avoid sleep mode. For a meeting room or a temporary display, it works fine. For a 24/7 lobby screen, it is not a stable long-term solution.
A single PC connected to one TV is straightforward. The challenge comes when you need the same presentation running on five TVs, across two floors, or in different offices.
Managing that with individual PCs means someone has to manually update each machine whenever the content changes. That creates version inconsistencies and wastes time.
This is where digital signage platforms become the practical choice. RocketScreens, for example, lets you upload a PowerPoint deck and push it to any number of screens through a centralised dashboard. Content updates happen once and propagate to all connected screens automatically.
For offices with multiple display locations, this approach removes the coordination overhead entirely. IT teams can manage screens remotely without physically touching each device.
Digital signage platforms solve the reliability and management problems that come with using a personal computer as a display device.
With a platform like RocketScreens:
This matters most for organizations where the people managing screen content are not the same people managing IT. A marketing or operations manager can update a presentation from any browser without needing access to the physical screen or the PC behind it.
RocketScreens also supports over 100 integrations, which means PowerPoint content can sit alongside live data feeds, tool dashboards, and real-time metrics on the same screen layout.
This is the most frequent error. The presentation loops but never moves past the first slide. Always set slide timings before running the show unattended.
Consumer TV media players are designed for personal video playback, not continuous business display. Loop behavior, file compatibility, and playback stability vary significantly by TV brand and model. For anything beyond a temporary setup, use a dedicated PC or signage platform.
If you use a laptop as the playback device, check your Windows power settings and disable sleep mode while plugged in. A screen going dark mid-loop is a common problem in reception areas and showrooms.
Simple but frequently overlooked. If the TV defaults back to its home screen or a different HDMI port after a power cycle, the presentation stops showing. Set the TV to auto-start on the correct input, or use a signage device that sends a wake signal.
When exporting PowerPoint to MP4, fonts that are not embedded or that use advanced rendering can look different in the video than in the original file. Preview the exported video before deploying it to a screen.
Here is a straightforward setup for a single office TV:
For a multi-screen office, replace steps four through seven with uploading the file to a signage platform and assigning it to the relevant screens through the platform's channel management interface.
Not natively. PowerPoint requires software to run, and most TVs do not support .pptx files. You can export the presentation as an MP4 video and play it from a USB drive using the TV's built-in media player, then enable repeat playback in the TV's settings. For a more reliable setup, a small media player or signage device connected to the TV handles this more consistently.
Kiosk mode enables looping but does not advance slides on its own. You also need to set slide timings. Go to the Transitions tab, enable the "After" timing option, set the number of seconds per slide, and apply it to all slides. Once timings are in place, the presentation will advance automatically.
A mini PC connected via HDMI is the most reliable option for single-screen setups. It runs PowerPoint natively, stays on without overheating like a laptop, and can be tucked behind the TV. For multi-screen environments, a digital signage platform combined with a small media player or smart TV app is more efficient to manage.
Yes, in many cases. Platforms like RocketScreens use lightweight players or smart TV apps that connect to a cloud-based content management system. You upload and update content through a browser, and the screens pull the latest version automatically. This removes the need to maintain individual PCs for each display.
If you are running PowerPoint directly on a PC, you need to close the slideshow, make changes, and restart it. If you are using a signage platform, you upload the revised file through the dashboard and the change propagates to all screens without physical intervention. For displays that need frequent updates, a managed signage platform is significantly more practical.
Setting up a single screen with a laptop works for a quick demo. Managing multiple screens, keeping content current, and ensuring displays run without someone checking on them daily is a different challenge entirely.
RocketScreens makes it straightforward to upload your PowerPoint content, schedule it across one screen or a hundred, and update it from anywhere without touching the physical devices.
Book a demo to see how it fits your setup, or explore the platform to see what your office screens could be showing right now.