ToDesk Remote Connection Steps and Advanced Features Explained
ToDesk does far more than just let you see the other party's screen. File transfer, multi-monitor switching, remote wake, remote printing, privacy screen, virtual screen, and keyboard and mouse shortcuts can sharply boost the efficiency of remote work and IT operations. This guide explains how each feature works and when to use it.
How do you use ToDesk to remotely control someone else's computer
The basic flow: 1) Both ends download and install ToDesk from the official site todeskremote.com; 2) Ask the other party for the Device Code and Temporary Password shown on their computer; 3) On your own ToDesk main screen, enter the other party's device code, click Connect, then fill in the temporary password to start remote control.
Note that since version 4.3.3.0, the controlling end that initiates the connection must sign in to an account first (users outside mainland China can register and sign in with an email). The party being connected to does not need to sign in; they only need to provide the code and password.
Where exactly do you find the ToDesk device code
The device code usually appears near the top of the ToDesk main window in the This Device or Device Code field. It is a string of digits, with the temporary password right next to it, and this code is the identifier used when someone connects to you.
If you want to connect to someone else, you enter their code in the connection input box on the main screen. If you want someone to connect to you, you give them this code plus your temporary password. If the whole interface is blank or no code appears, the local ToDesk service may not have started yet; confirm the program has opened properly and, if needed, restart the software and check again.
When using ToDesk remotely, is entering the other party's device code all you need
Using ToDesk remotely also requires a password. Entering only the other party's device code will not connect you. During the connection the system asks you to fill in the other party's temporary password (which by default updates after each connection) or a fixed password the other party has set in advance, and you need both to succeed at remote control.
So ask the other party to give you both items: the device code plus the temporary password. This two-factor verification is exactly what stops a stranger from breaking in with the code alone.
How do you send files to the other party's computer with ToDesk
ToDesk has built-in file transfer. During a remote control session, you can usually use the File Transfer entry on the toolbar, or simply drag and drop files onto the remote window to send them.
Files you send usually land in a designated receiving folder on the other party's computer (often the ToDesk download or received-files folder, or a location you choose), and the actual path depends on what you select during transfer or the software default receiving folder. Before sending, it is best to confirm the receiving path on the other end, and after the transfer ask the other party to check the file in that folder.
How do you set up unattended access in ToDesk
The core of unattended access is setting a fixed password (security password) on the controlled computer. Once set, even with no one at the computer to accept manually, you can connect anytime using the device code plus this fixed password, which is exactly what unattended access is for.
The setting is usually found in the ToDesk security or unattended access settings. After enabling it, set a sufficiently strong fixed password. A reminder: unattended access means anyone who knows the code plus the password can connect anytime, so the password must be complex and never leaked, and you can turn this feature off when you do not need it.
Can you use a phone to control a Windows computer at home with ToDesk
Yes. ToDesk works across all platforms, and a phone (Android or iOS) can remotely control a Windows computer at home.
How to do it: 1) On the computer, install ToDesk from todeskremote.com and keep it open (if you want to connect while away, set up the unattended fixed password first); 2) On the phone, install the official ToDesk app from the App Store or your app store (iOS requires iOS 13.0 or higher); 3) On the phone, enter the computer's device code, then fill in the temporary or fixed password to connect. The new controlling end requires account sign-in, and users outside mainland China can register and sign in with an email.
Can you use a computer to control a phone the other way around with ToDesk
ToDesk supports controlling an Android phone from a computer (the number of Android devices you can control also depends on your version; the free version does not include Android control, which requires the Professional version or above, and the controllable Android count differs by version).
As for controlling an iPhone from a computer, because iOS imposes strict limits on remote operation, most remote control software can usually only do screen sharing or viewing on an iPhone and cannot fully control it the way Android allows. So controlling Android from a computer is more feasible (a paid version is required), while fully controlling an iPhone from a computer is constrained by the system; please rely on the official documentation and your own testing for what is actually possible.
I keep failing to connect to the other party with ToDesk
Check the common causes in order: 1) Confirm the device code and password are entered correctly and whether the temporary password has expired and updated; 2) Check whether both networks are stable, or whether the official servers are temporarily having issues; 3) Confirm the controlled end's ToDesk is open and the local ToDesk Service is running (on Windows you can check in services.msc); 4) Cross-border connections over the ordinary line are slower, and a 3 to 4 second pause on the first connection is normal initialization, so wait a moment; 5) If it still does not work, try a different connection method or contact official support.
How do you set ToDesk to connect automatically on startup
To stay reachable remotely after a restart, two things matter: 1) Have ToDesk launch automatically on startup (you can usually enable launch on startup in the software settings so it stands by in the background after a restart); 2) Set an unattended access fixed password, so without anyone at the computer to accept manually you can connect anytime using the device code plus the fixed password.
With both combined, once the controlled computer restarts and finishes signing in, ToDesk is ready in the background and you can connect back remotely. Be sure to make the unattended access password strong enough.
What is the difference between the ToDesk device code and the temporary password
The ToDesk device code is your computer's street address, fixed and unchanging, used to let the other party find and specify that you are the one to connect to. The temporary password is the key, which by default updates after each connection and is used for verification.
To let someone connect to your computer, you must give both: first the device code so they can enter it to locate you, then the temporary password so they can pass verification, neither one optional. Precisely because the code alone without the password cannot get in, do not casually leak both together to people you do not trust.
I am in Hong Kong using ToDesk to remotely control the company computer in Taiwan
Being in Hong Kong and using ToDesk to remotely control the company computer in Taiwan does connect; devices inside and outside mainland China can interconnect, and cross-border connection itself works.
But whether it lags depends on the line: the free version only uses the ordinary line for cross-border, where latency and lag are usually quite noticeable, and on top of that the free version has had speed limits and reduced quotas added since 2024, so high-motion images lag even more. For stable low latency, you need to separately purchase the paid Global Node feature (one end must be outside mainland China, both accounts purchase the plugin separately, and the controlled end must upgrade to V4.6.1.0 or higher). If you only handle documents and use it occasionally at low frequency, the free version is usually just about enough.
Using ToDesk in Singapore to remotely control a computer in mainland China
Yes, ToDesk supports remote connections between devices in mainland China and overseas, and cross-border connection itself is fine.
What to note is the experience: the free version only uses the ordinary line for cross-border, where latency and lag are quite noticeable. For stable low latency, you need to separately purchase the paid Global Node feature, with these activation conditions: either the controlling or controlled end is outside mainland China, both accounts purchase the Global Node plugin separately, and the controlled end software is upgraded to V4.6.1.0 or higher. In addition, an overseas mobile number (such as a Singapore number) cannot be bound for registration, so it is best to register and sign in with an international email such as Gmail or Outlook.
Using ToDesk here in Malaysia to remotely control a computer in China
It very likely will be affected. There are two points with ToDesk here: first, the free version has been widely reported through community testing as throttled since 2024, so high-motion images lag and controls feel unresponsive; second, for cross-border the free version only uses the ordinary line, where latency is already higher.
With the two combined, the free experience of controlling a computer in China from Malaysia tends to lag. To improve it you need to pay: upgrade the version to raise the high-definition frame rate, and purchase the Global Node feature to use the optimized line (one end outside mainland China, both purchasing the plugin, and the controlled end V4.6.1.0 or higher). The free version is acceptable for low-frequency document work, but for high-frequency or high-definition needs paying is recommended.
How do you set the ToDesk security password
First, rest assured: someone merely knowing your device code cannot get in; they must also have the temporary password or a fixed password you have set.
The so-called security password or fixed password is usually set in the ToDesk security settings. It replaces the temporary password that changes each time and makes it convenient for you to connect for your own unattended access. Key points: use a password that is complex enough and unguessable, and do not set it to a birthday or simple digits. When you do not need unattended access, do not set a fixed password and use the temporary password that refreshes each time instead, which is more secure.
References:ToDesk Official Website · Microsoft Remote Desktop Services Documentation · ToDesk Enterprise Edition Overview
Frequently Asked Questions
Below are common questions and answers about "ToDesk Remote Connection Steps and Advanced Features Explained". Tap any to expand.
How do you use ToDesk to remotely control someone else's computer, and what do you do the first time
The basic flow: 1) Both ends download and install ToDesk from the official site todeskremote.com; 2) Ask the other party for the Device Code and Temporary Password shown on their computer; 3) On your own ToDesk main screen, enter the other party's device code, click Connect, then fill in the temporary password to start remote control. Note that since version 4.3.3.0, the controlling end that initiates the connection must sign in to an account first (users outside mainland China can register and sign in with an email). The party being connected to does not need to sign in; they only need to provide the code and password.
Where exactly do you find the ToDesk device code, since I cannot find it when I open the software
The device code usually appears near the top of the ToDesk main window in the This Device or Device Code field. It is a string of digits, with the temporary password right next to it, and this code is the identifier used when someone connects to you. If you want to connect to someone else, you enter their code in the connection input box on the main screen. If you want someone to connect to you, you give them this code plus your temporary password. If the whole interface is blank or no code appears, the local ToDesk service may not have started yet; confirm the program has opened properly and, if needed, restart the software and check again.
When using ToDesk remotely, is entering the other party's device code all you need, or do you still need a password
Using ToDesk remotely also requires a password. Entering only the other party's device code will not connect you. During the connection the system asks you to fill in the other party's temporary password (which by default updates after each connection) or a fixed password the other party has set in advance, and you need both to succeed at remote control. So ask the other party to give you both items: the device code plus the temporary password. This two-factor verification is exactly what stops a stranger from breaking in with the code alone.
How do you send files to the other party's computer with ToDesk, and which folder do the files go to
ToDesk has built-in file transfer. During a remote control session, you can usually use the File Transfer entry on the toolbar, or simply drag and drop files onto the remote window to send them. Files you send usually land in a designated receiving folder on the other party's computer (often the ToDesk download or received-files folder, or a location you choose), and the actual path depends on what you select during transfer or the software default receiving folder. Before sending, it is best to confirm the receiving path on the other end, and after the transfer ask the other party to check the file in that folder.
How do you set up unattended access in ToDesk, so I can connect even when I am not at the computer
The core of unattended access is setting a fixed password (security password) on the controlled computer. Once set, even with no one at the computer to accept manually, you can connect anytime using the device code plus this fixed password, which is exactly what unattended access is for. The setting is usually found in the ToDesk security or unattended access settings. After enabling it, set a sufficiently strong fixed password. A reminder: unattended access means anyone who knows the code plus the password can connect anytime, so the password must be complex and never leaked, and you can turn this feature off when you do not need it.
Can you use a phone to control a Windows computer at home with ToDesk, and how do you connect
Yes. ToDesk works across all platforms, and a phone (Android or iOS) can remotely control a Windows computer at home. How to do it: 1) On the computer, install ToDesk from todeskremote.com and keep it open (if you want to connect while away, set up the unattended fixed password first); 2) On the phone, install the official ToDesk app from the App Store or your app store (iOS requires iOS 13.0 or higher); 3) On the phone, enter the computer's device code, then fill in the temporary or fixed password to connect. The new controlling end requires account sign-in, and users outside mainland China can register and sign in with an email.
Can you use a computer to control a phone the other way around with ToDesk, and does it work for both Android and iPhone
ToDesk supports controlling an Android phone from a computer (the number of Android devices you can control also depends on your version; the free version does not include Android control, which requires the Professional version or above, and the controllable Android count differs by version). As for controlling an iPhone from a computer, because iOS imposes strict limits on remote operation, most remote control software can usually only do screen sharing or viewing on an iPhone and cannot fully control it the way Android allows. So controlling Android from a computer is more feasible (a paid version is required), while fully controlling an iPhone from a computer is constrained by the system; please rely on the official documentation and your own testing for what is actually possible.
I keep failing to connect to the other party with ToDesk, and after entering the code it gets stuck on connecting, what is the reason
Check the common causes in order: 1) Confirm the device code and password are entered correctly and whether the temporary password has expired and updated; 2) Check whether both networks are stable, or whether the official servers are temporarily having issues; 3) Confirm the controlled end's ToDesk is open and the local ToDesk Service is running (on Windows you can check in services.msc); 4) Cross-border connections over the ordinary line are slower, and a 3 to 4 second pause on the first connection is normal initialization, so wait a moment; 5) If it still does not work, try a different connection method or contact official support.
How do you set ToDesk to connect automatically on startup, so I can still go remote after a restart
To stay reachable remotely after a restart, two things matter: 1) Have ToDesk launch automatically on startup (you can usually enable launch on startup in the software settings so it stands by in the background after a restart); 2) Set an unattended access fixed password, so without anyone at the computer to accept manually you can connect anytime using the device code plus the fixed password. With both combined, once the controlled computer restarts and finishes signing in, ToDesk is ready in the background and you can connect back remotely. Be sure to make the unattended access password strong enough.
What is the difference between the ToDesk device code and the temporary password, and which one should I give the other party
The ToDesk device code is your computer's street address, fixed and unchanging, used to let the other party find and specify that you are the one to connect to. The temporary password is the key, which by default updates after each connection and is used for verification. To let someone connect to your computer, you must give both: first the device code so they can enter it to locate you, then the temporary password so they can pass verification, neither one optional. Precisely because the code alone without the password cannot get in, do not casually leak both together to people you do not trust.
I am in Hong Kong using ToDesk to remotely control the company computer in Taiwan, will it lag a lot or fail to connect
Being in Hong Kong and using ToDesk to remotely control the company computer in Taiwan does connect; devices inside and outside mainland China can interconnect, and cross-border connection itself works. But whether it lags depends on the line: the free version only uses the ordinary line for cross-border, where latency and lag are usually quite noticeable, and on top of that the free version has had speed limits and reduced quotas added since 2024, so high-motion images lag even more. For stable low latency, you need to separately purchase the paid Global Node feature (one end must be outside mainland China, both accounts purchase the plugin separately, and the controlled end must upgrade to V4.6.1.0 or higher). If you only handle documents and use it occasionally at low frequency, the free version is usually just about enough.
Using ToDesk in Singapore to remotely control a computer in mainland China, can cross-border connection be used
Yes, ToDesk supports remote connections between devices in mainland China and overseas, and cross-border connection itself is fine. What to note is the experience: the free version only uses the ordinary line for cross-border, where latency and lag are quite noticeable. For stable low latency, you need to separately purchase the paid Global Node feature, with these activation conditions: either the controlling or controlled end is outside mainland China, both accounts purchase the Global Node plugin separately, and the controlled end software is upgraded to V4.6.1.0 or higher. In addition, an overseas mobile number (such as a Singapore number) cannot be bound for registration, so it is best to register and sign in with an international email such as Gmail or Outlook.
Using ToDesk here in Malaysia to remotely control a computer in China, will the network speed be throttled
It very likely will be affected. There are two points with ToDesk here: first, the free version has been widely reported through community testing as throttled since 2024, so high-motion images lag and controls feel unresponsive; second, for cross-border the free version only uses the ordinary line, where latency is already higher. With the two combined, the free experience of controlling a computer in China from Malaysia tends to lag. To improve it you need to pay: upgrade the version to raise the high-definition frame rate, and purchase the Global Node feature to use the optimized line (one end outside mainland China, both purchasing the plugin, and the controlled end V4.6.1.0 or higher). The free version is acceptable for low-frequency document work, but for high-frequency or high-definition needs paying is recommended.
How do you set the ToDesk security password, since I am worried someone can connect to my computer just by knowing my code
First, rest assured: someone merely knowing your device code cannot get in; they must also have the temporary password or a fixed password you have set. The so-called security password or fixed password is usually set in the ToDesk security settings. It replaces the temporary password that changes each time and makes it convenient for you to connect for your own unattended access. Key points: use a password that is complex enough and unguessable, and do not set it to a birthday or simple digits. When you do not need unattended access, do not set a fixed password and use the temporary password that refreshes each time instead, which is more secure.
Can the ToDesk free version do unattended access, or do you have to get a membership
Unattended access is one of the core features ToDesk publicly advertises, and the free version can generally use basic unattended access (set a fixed password for the controlled computer, then connect anytime with the code plus the fixed password). Membership is mainly about gaining higher-definition frame rates, more devices, privacy screen, Global Node, and other premium capabilities, rather than simply whether unattended access is possible. If you just want to connect back to your own machine while away from the computer, the free version's unattended access is usually enough; please rely on the official pricing page for the exact version benefits.
After setting an unattended access password in ToDesk, can other people connect to my computer anytime, and is it safe
After setting an unattended access fixed password in ToDesk, anyone who simultaneously knows your device code plus this fixed password can connect anytime while you are away from the computer, which is exactly the design of unattended access. So whether it is safe depends on how you manage this password: 1) make it complex enough and unguessable; 2) never leak it together with the device code; 3) when you no longer need it, turn off unattended access and use the temporary password that refreshes each time; 4) regularly check the device list for unfamiliar connections. Do these few things and unattended access is safe to use.
Using ToDesk here in Vietnam to connect back to a computer in China, do I need to turn on a VPN
Generally you do not need to turn on an extra VPN. ToDesk supports global connections, cross-border remote control between Vietnam and China itself works, and when it detects a cross-border connection it uses its own line. The free version only uses the ordinary line for cross-border, with higher latency and more lag; for stable low latency you should purchase the official paid Global Node feature (one end outside mainland China, both purchasing the plugin, and the controlled end upgraded to V4.6.1.0 or higher) rather than relying on a VPN. Also, a Vietnamese mobile number cannot be bound for registration, so it is best to register and sign in with an international email such as Gmail or Outlook.
I work in Cambodia and want to remotely control my home computer in Taiwan, can ToDesk be used in both places
Yes, ToDesk supports global connections, and it can be used in both Cambodia and Taiwan and can interconnect. Note two points: 1) for cross-border the free version only uses the ordinary line, where latency and lag are quite noticeable, and for stable low latency you need to separately purchase the paid Global Node (one end outside mainland China, both purchasing the plugin, and the controlled end V4.6.1.0 or higher); 2) an overseas mobile number cannot be bound for registration, and the controlling end that initiates the connection must sign in to an account in the new version, so it is best to register and sign in directly with an international email such as Gmail or Outlook, which bypasses the mobile number limit.
ToDesk lags and has a lot of latency during remote sessions, is it my network or do I need a membership for it to run smoothly
Both reasons are possible for ToDesk lag and latency during remote sessions. On one hand, the free version has hard caps on image quality and frame rate (the image only reaches smooth or low definition, the frame rate is capped at 30, and since 2024 community testing has confirmed added throttling), and cross-border only uses the ordinary line, so it is prone to lag to begin with. On the other hand, an unstable network or insufficient bandwidth also causes continuous lag. First troubleshoot on your own: upgrade to the new version, close other apps using the network, and improve your network; a 3 to 4 second pause on the first connection is normal initialization. If you want above 60 frames, ultra-high definition original quality, or low cross-border latency, these all require payment (a high-definition membership plus Global Node).
Does the ToDesk free version have a time limit for remote control, and does it disconnect after a while
The ToDesk free version has quota limits for remote control, and they have been tightened year by year. The free version has a monthly connection count plus total duration allowance: from June 2024 it was up to 300 times and 120 hours per month; from March 2025 it was cut again to up to 200 times and 80 hours per month. The quota counts for both the controlling end and the controlled end, and once used up the free version cannot continue connecting, so you wait for the refresh at midnight on the 1st of the next month or upgrade to a paid version. It is not that it forces a disconnect after each session for a while, but rather that you cannot connect once the accumulated count or duration for the month is used up.
What does it mean when ToDesk shows Your free connection count is used up, and do I have to pay
When ToDesk shows this message, it means your free connection quota for the month is used up. The free version has a monthly limit (from 2025 it is up to 200 connections and 80 hours of duration), and this count is recorded for both the controlling end and the controlled end, so once the limit is reached you cannot connect anymore. Two solutions: 1) wait for free until the allowance refreshes automatically at midnight on the 1st of the next month and continue using it; 2) if you use it frequently and cannot wait, upgrade to a paid version (such as the Professional version at about 13 RMB per month on an annual plan, the Gaming version, the Performance version, and so on) to remove the quota limit. You can use it without paying, but you have to wait for the next month reset.