When a Dyson brush bar stops spinning and you cannot find a blockage, it feels confusing. You clean the head. You check the wand. Airflow seems clear. The vacuum turns on, but the brush just sits there.
This situation is more common than most people realize. A brush bar can stop spinning even when there are no visible clogs. In most cases, the vacuum is reacting to another issue that is easy to miss.
This guide explains the real reasons a Dyson brush bar will not spin when there is no blockage and how to fix each one.
The Brush Bar Can Shut Off for Protection
Dyson brush bars have built-in protection.
If the vacuum senses too much resistance or heat, it cuts power to the brush.
This protects the belt and motor.
The vacuum may still run, which makes it feel like the brush is broken when it is actually paused.
Hair Wrapped Inside the End Caps
Even when the brush looks clean, hair often hides where you cannot see it.
Hair wraps inside the end caps of the brush bar.
This creates drag that is not obvious from the outside.
The vacuum senses resistance and shuts the brush down.
How to Check the Brush Ends
Turn the vacuum off and unplug it.
Remove the cleaner head.
Unlock the brush bar if your model allows removal.
Slide the brush out.
Check both ends closely.
Pull out any wrapped hair or thread.
Spin the brush by hand before reinstalling it.
It should turn freely with no grinding or stiffness.
Low Battery on Cordless Models
On cordless Dyson vacuums, the brush bar often stops before the motor.
The vacuum may still run, but brush power drops.
This can happen even when the battery shows some charge.
If the brush spins briefly and then stops, battery strength is a strong suspect.
Fully charge the vacuum.
If run time is very short or power fades fast, the battery may be worn.
Dirty Filter Causing Heat Shutoff
A dirty filter can stop the brush bar without any clog.
When the filter is clogged with fine dust, airflow drops.
Reduced airflow causes heat to build.
Heat triggers brush bar shutoff.
The vacuum may keep running, but the brush stops.
How to Fix a Filter-Related Brush Problem
Remove the filter.
Rinse it under cold water.
Squeeze gently and rotate while rinsing.
Keep rinsing until the water runs clear.
No soap.
Let the filter dry for a full twenty four hours.
Never reinstall a damp filter.
The Brush Is Disabled by Floor Mode
Some Dyson models turn the brush off automatically on hard floors.
This is normal.
If you are testing the vacuum on tile or hardwood, the brush may not spin.
Move the vacuum onto carpet and test again.
Also check if your model has a floor selector switch.
Make sure it is set to carpet mode.
The Cleaner Head Is Not Seated Properly
If the head is slightly loose, power may not reach the brush motor.
This can happen after cleaning or disassembly.
Remove the cleaner head.
Reattach it firmly until it clicks.
Do the same with the wand connection.
Loose connections break power delivery.
Hair Wrapped Around the Wheels
This problem hides in plain sight.
Hair wraps around the wheel axles.
When wheels drag, the brush bar may stop.
Spin each wheel by hand.
If a wheel does not spin freely, pull or cut hair away.
Overheat Protection Without a Blockage
Heat does not always come from clogs.
Heat can come from:
Dirty filters
Heavy carpet
Long run times
High power mode
If the vacuum was running hard before the brush stopped, heat may be the reason.
Turn the vacuum off.
Let it cool for at least thirty minutes.
Then try again.
Brush Belt or Internal Drive Issues
If the brush bar never spins at all, even after cleaning and cooling, the issue may be mechanical.
Possible signs:
The brush spins very freely by hand with no resistance.
The brush never twitches when the vacuum starts.
This often points to a worn belt or failed brush motor.
These parts wear over time, especially in pet homes.
How to Tell If It’s a Mechanical Failure
If you have:
Clean airflow
A fully dry filter
A fully charged battery or stable power
No hair in the brush ends or wheels
And the brush still will not spin, internal wear is likely.
At that point, replacing the cleaner head or brush assembly is often the fix.
Quick Checklist When There Is No Blockage
Check hair inside brush end caps.
Charge the battery fully.
Wash and dry the filter.
Test on carpet, not hard floors.
Reattach the cleaner head firmly.
Clear hair from wheels.
Let the vacuum cool.
One of these steps solves most cases.
Why This Happens More in Pet Homes
Pet hair is thin and strong.
It works its way into small spaces.
It wraps slowly where you cannot see it.
That hidden resistance is enough to stop the brush even when airflow looks clear.
The Bottom Line
If your Dyson brush bar is not spinning and there is no blockage, the vacuum is usually protecting itself.
Hidden hair, heat, low battery, dirty filters, or loose connections stop the brush before damage happens.
Clear resistance.
Restore airflow.
Let it cool.
In most cases, the brush bar starts spinning again and carpet cleaning power comes right back.
When it does not, cleaner head wear is the likely cause, not a mystery failure.