Wifite is not natively available for Windows. It is a Linux-based tool that requires Monitor Mode and Packet Injection, which Windows drivers typically do not support for standard Wi-Fi adapters.
Since Wifite requires "monitor mode" and "packet injection"—features not supported by standard Windows wireless drivers—you must use one of the following setups: wifite for windows
Try running sudo wifite in WSL. You will likely see: No wireless interfaces found. Why? WSL 2 uses a virtual network adapter (NAT) that cannot enter monitor mode. You cannot use your internal laptop Wi-Fi card with WSL 2 for packet injection. Wifite is not natively available for Windows
The Challenges and Realities of Using Wifite on Windows Wifite is a popular automated wireless auditing tool designed to simplify the process of testing Wi-Fi network security. However, for users attempting to run Wifite for Windows, the experience is defined by significant technical hurdles and architectural limitations. While the tool is a staple in the Linux-based cybersecurity community, its transition to the Windows environment remains a complex and often inefficient endeavor. The Architectural Divide Windows GUI/launcher that controls a small Linux appliance
and drivers that can be forced into a "listening" state (Monitor Mode). Windows drivers are designed for connectivity, not auditing, and lock the hardware to prevent the raw packet access these tools need. WIFITE on KALI LINUX by VIRTUALBOX 22 Dec 2017 —
Acrylic Wi-Fi Professional: A polished Windows app that provides advanced WLAN analysis.
Even if you force the installation, tools like airodump-ng will fail to enter monitor mode on a standard Windows Wi-Fi adapter. The drivers (Broadcom, Intel, Realtek) are optimized for connectivity, not packet capture or injection.