This is the standard driver package provided by HMD Global. It is WHQL certified (Windows Hardware Quality Labs) and safe for general use.
Why a user might need a USB driver for this device:
But here is the twist: The official Nokia 130 USB driver is notoriously difficult to find on Nokia's modern website, now managed by HMD Global. Instead, it lives in the digital shadows—on third-party driver aggregators, old forum threads from 2015, and YouTube tutorials with grainy screen recordings. To find it, you must bypass the modern web’s sleek interfaces and descend into the catacombs of the internet.
The Nokia 130 USB driver offers several features, including:
The Nokia 130, released in 2014, was never meant to be a star. It was a workhorse: a monochrome (later slightly colored) display, a built-in flashlight, a micro-USB port, and a battery that could last a month. It was a phone for backup, for emerging markets, for the glovebox. Yet, the hunt for its USB driver reveals a strange paradox: a device that rejects modernity, but cannot fully escape it.