Plex was working perfectly fine until it wasn’t. You know that feeling — snack in hand, ready to watch something, and your server just refuses. Nothing plays. The app spins. The dashboard looks like it’s having an existential crisis.
So I did what any reasonable person does. Went to Reddit at 11pm and read strangers’ opinions until my eyes glazed over.
There are a LOT of confident people on the internet who are very sure they’ve solved Plex. Some of them are right. Some of them are describing their very specific setup that has nothing to do with yours. I tried five of the most upvoted fixes I found. I’m here to report back.
Why is Plex acting up right now?
Plex has had a rough stretch — server-side issues, app updates that broke things that weren’t broken, and a general sense that the platform is juggling more than it used to. Plex’s own status page has seen more activity lately than most people would like. The community forums are full of people describing the same three or four symptoms, which at least means you’re not alone, even if it doesn’t fix anything.
The most common complaints right now — remote access dropping, libraries not updating, the dreaded “Server Not Found” message, buffering on local streams that have no business buffering. Sound familiar?
Fix #1: Sign out and sign back in (yes, really)
This is the fix that made me roll my eyes the hardest, and also the one that worked the most consistently. Multiple threads recommended fully signing out of the Plex app on every device, clearing the app cache, and signing back in fresh.
I tried it on three devices. Two of them immediately found the server like nothing had ever been wrong. One needed a full app reinstall — but it worked after that. Plex authentication tokens can go stale, and a fresh sign-in forces a new one. Annoying? Yes. Effective? Also yes.
Verdict: Actually works. Do this first before you do anything else.
Fix #2: Disable and re-enable remote access in server settings
This one was everywhere in the r/PleX threads and it’s specifically for the “I can’t access my server from outside my home network” problem. Go into your Plex Web dashboard, hit Settings > Remote Access, disable it, save, then re-enable it.
When I did this, there was a solid three minutes where I was convinced I’d made everything worse. The server showed as completely unreachable. Then it refreshed and the relay kicked back in. NAT traversal just gets stuck sometimes and needs a kick to renegotiate — which sounds made up but is apparently a real thing.
This worked for me once out of two attempts, and the community reports something like 80% success. Give it five full minutes before you panic.
Verdict: Worth trying. Do not freak out during the three-minute dead zone.
Is a changing local IP address secretly the culprit?
Several highly upvoted comments insisted that remote access problems are almost always caused by your server machine’s local IP address changing — which causes your router’s port forwarding to point at nothing. The fix is to assign a static local IP to the machine running Plex.
This is a real thing that really happens. If you don’t know what any of those words mean, this fix is going to take you longer than you think. I spent forty minutes in my router settings and another twenty minutes reading a secondary thread to do it correctly. But what do I know — maybe you’re faster at this than I am.
Did it fix things? Eventually, yes. But this is a permanent infrastructure fix, not a Tuesday night solve. If your IP was the culprit, you’ll know because everything will suddenly work great and stay working.
Verdict: Correct and useful, but this is a weekend project.
Fix #4: Delete the Plex database and let it rebuild
I want to be honest with you — this one scared me.
Several threads recommended navigating to the Plex data directory, deleting the database files, and letting Plex rebuild from scratch. The reasoning is that a corrupted database causes all kinds of silent problems — missing metadata, libraries that won’t scan, playback errors that make no logical sense.
I backed everything up first. That part is non-negotiable — don’t skip it. Then I deleted the database. Then I waited while Plex rebuilt, which took a while because it had a lot to catalog. When it came back, the library scanning issue I’d been having was completely gone.
Here’s the thing though. You lose your watch history, your ratings, your playlists. Everything that lives in that database. For some people, that’s fine. For others, that’s a dealbreaker. Only you know which camp you’re in.
Verdict: Nuclear option, but it works. Back up first or I will not be held responsible.
Fix #5: Should you turn off “prefer secure connections” in Plex?
This one I found in a deep-dive thread on the Plex forums and it felt counterintuitive enough that I almost skipped it. Plex’s “prefer secure connections” setting can sometimes cause it to fail connecting entirely instead of gracefully falling back to a local connection. Disabling that preference lets it be more flexible about how it connects.
I tried it and it did resolve a specific issue I was having with one client that kept timing out. The tradeoff is that you’re loosening a security setting — look, I’m not your IT department, you have to decide if that’s okay for your setup.
Not a fix I’d leave in place forever, but as a diagnostic step to confirm that connection negotiation is your problem? Genuinely useful.
Verdict: Good for diagnosing. Not necessarily a permanent solution.
So what should you actually try first?
The order matters here, because some of these fixes are five minutes and some of them are an hour of your life.
Start with the sign-out fix. It solves more than it has any right to. Then try the remote access toggle if remote access is your specific issue. Check whether your server’s local IP has been changing — your router’s DHCP lease table will tell you this. Only go nuclear with the database delete if nothing else works and you’ve backed everything up first.
And if you’ve done all of this and Plex is still broken — check the Plex status page before you keep troubleshooting. Sometimes it’s not you. Sometimes they’re just having a moment and no amount of Reddit wisdom is going to help until they fix it on their end.
I’ve gone down similar rabbit holes in my breakdown of streaming setup headaches if any of this felt familiar in a broader sense. Also if you’re the kind of person who ends up in router settings at midnight, you might want to check out my notes on home network gear that actually holds up.
Most Plex problems right now come down to authentication tokens, IP address changes, or something Plex broke on their end. In that order. Start simple before you start deleting databases.
The Reddit rabbit hole is a wild place. Real expertise in there, mixed with people who are very confidently wrong about your specific setup. But what do I know — I’m just a blogger who spent her Saturday in her router settings.
If none of this helped and you’re still staring at a spinning wheel — grab the snack anyway. You earned it.
Frequently asked questions
Why does my Plex server keep saying ‘Server Not Found’?
How do I fix Plex remote access not working?
Will deleting the Plex database fix my library scanning problems?
Why is Plex buffering on my local network?
What does ‘prefer secure connections: disabled’ do in Plex?
How do I know if Plex is down right now?
What should I try first when Plex stops working?







