A few reliable methods depending on your version and setup
Minecraft pausing every time you click away from the window is one of those behaviors that makes perfect sense in single player — pausing the game when you step away prevents you from dying while you’re gone.
But when you’re playing on a server, watching a guide on a second monitor, or need to reference something quickly, the pause is actively disruptive.
Here’s every method to stop it depending on your version and situation.
Why Minecraft Pauses on Alt+Tab
In single player, the pause is intentional. Minecraft pauses the game when the window loses focus to prevent time from passing, mobs from moving, and the player from taking damage while unattended. It’s a quality of life feature for offline play.
In multiplayer, the game doesn’t actually pause — the server keeps running regardless of whether you’re focused on the window. But Minecraft still shows a pause menu overlay when you Alt+Tab out, which blocks your view of the game and requires you to click back in and dismiss it.
The goal is to remove either the pause behavior itself or the pause menu overlay, depending on which version you’re playing.
Method 1: Use a Resource Pack or Mod (Java Edition)
For Java Edition, the most reliable and cleanest solution is a mod that disables the focus-loss pause behavior entirely.
Vu’s No Pause (or similar mods) on CurseForge and Modrinth specifically disable the pause-on-focus-loss behavior. Search for “no pause” or “unfocused” on either platform for your version of Minecraft. Install it through your mod loader — Forge or Fabric depending on your setup — and the game no longer pauses when you Alt+Tab.
Quilt and Fabric users have particularly good options here since the lightweight mod ecosystem has several dedicated solutions for this specific behavior.
Method 2: Edit the Options File Directly (Java Edition)
Java Edition stores game settings in a plain text options file that can be edited directly to control pause behavior.
Close Minecraft completely. Navigate to your Minecraft directory:
Press Windows + R and type %appdata%.minecraft then press Enter.
Find the file named options.txt and open it in Notepad or any text editor.
Look for the line:
pauseOnLostFocus:true
Change it to:
pauseOnLostFocus:false
Save the file and reopen Minecraft. The game no longer pauses when the window loses focus.
If the line doesn’t exist in your options.txt, add it manually on a new line. Minecraft will read it on next launch.
This is the simplest method requiring no mods and works on any Java Edition version that uses this setting.
Method 3: Use F3 + P Toggle (Java Edition)
Java Edition has a built-in keyboard shortcut that toggles the pause-on-focus-loss behavior without needing to edit any files.
While in Minecraft, press F3 + P simultaneously. A message appears in chat confirming whether pause on lost focus is now enabled or disabled.
Press it once to disable pausing on focus loss. Press it again to re-enable it. The setting persists between sessions — you don’t need to press it every time you launch.
This is the fastest method for Java Edition users who want a quick toggle without touching any files or installing mods.
Method 4: Windowed or Borderless Windowed Mode
Running Minecraft in windowed or borderless windowed mode changes how the operating system treats focus changes and can reduce or eliminate the pause behavior in some configurations.
In Minecraft settings go to Options → Video Settings and change the display mode from Fullscreen to Windowed or Borderless Fullscreen if available.
Borderless windowed mode in particular — where the game window fills the screen without a title bar — allows you to click to other applications without the game interpreting it as the same kind of focus loss that triggers a pause. On multi-monitor setups this is often the best configuration regardless of the pause issue.
Method 5: Bedrock Edition Settings
Bedrock Edition handles this differently from Java Edition and the options available depend on the platform.
On Windows (Bedrock), go to Settings → Video and look for a Focus-Pausing related option if available in your version. Bedrock has added more configuration options over time.
On Windows specifically, running Bedrock in windowed mode and using the Xbox Game Bar overlay (Windows + G) to switch tasks keeps the Bedrock window technically active while you interact with other windows — this varies in effectiveness but works for some setups.
For Bedrock, the most consistent solution on PC is using windowed mode and avoiding full Alt+Tab focus changes where possible — true background play options are more limited than in Java Edition.
For Servers and Multiplayer
On multiplayer servers, the pause menu appearing when you Alt+Tab is cosmetic — the game is still running on the server and your character is still in the world. The pause overlay just blocks your view.
The F3 + P method and the options.txt edit both remove this overlay effectively. After applying either fix, Alt+Tabbing away from a multiplayer session shows the game continuing in the background rather than a pause menu covering it.
This is particularly useful for:
- Watching a tutorial video while following steps in game
- Referencing a map or guide on a second monitor
- Chatting in Discord while staying in a server
- Copying coordinates or notes between Minecraft and another application
For Twitch Streaming and Recording
If you’re streaming or recording Minecraft, the pause-on-focus-loss behavior causes your stream or recording to show a pause menu every time you click to OBS, chat, or another application. Disabling it with F3 + P or the options.txt edit keeps the game visible and running smoothly on stream regardless of where your mouse focus is.
A Quick Checklist
Choose the method that fits your situation:
- Fastest toggle — press F3 + P in Java Edition while in game
- Permanent fix without mods — edit options.txt and set pauseOnLostFocus to false
- Cleanest solution with mods — install a no-pause mod from Modrinth or CurseForge
- Reduce focus sensitivity — switch to Borderless Windowed display mode
- Bedrock Edition — use windowed mode and check Settings → Video for available options
The Bottom Line
For Java Edition, F3 + P is the immediate answer — press it once in game and the pause-on-focus-loss behavior toggles off permanently. The options.txt edit achieves the same result if you prefer doing it outside the game. Both work without any mods and persist between sessions.
For Bedrock Edition the options are more limited, but windowed mode reduces the issue for most use cases.
Minecraft pauses to protect you in single player — F3 + P tells it you don’t need that protection.
Meet Ry, “TechGuru,” a 36-year-old technology enthusiast with a deep passion for tech innovations. With extensive experience, he specializes in gaming hardware and software, and has expertise in gadgets, custom PCs, and audio.
Besides writing about tech and reviewing new products, he enjoys traveling, hiking, and photography. Committed to keeping up with the latest industry trends, he aims to guide readers in making informed tech decisions.