Electroencephalography microstate analysis has emerged as a powerful tool for investigating brain dynamics during anesthesia-induced unconsciousness. However, existing studies typically analyze EEG signals across broad frequency bands, leaving the frequency-specific temporal characteristics of microstates poorly understood. In this study, we investigated frequency-specific EEG microstate features in the delta (0.5-4 Hz) and EEG-without-delta (4-30 Hz) frequency bands during propofol anesthesia. Sixty-channel EEG recordings were collected from 18 healthy male participants during wakefulness and propofol-induced unconsciousness. Microstate analysis was conducted separately for delta and EEG-without-delta frequency bands and microstate features were compared across frequency bands and conscious states. Our results revealed eight consistent microstate classes (MS1-MS8) with high topographic similarity across frequency bands, while global explained variance (GEV), mean duration (MeanDur), occurrence (Occ), and coverage (Cov) exhibited significant frequency- and state-dependent variations during propofol anesthesia. In the delta band, propofol-induced unconsciousness was associated with significantly longer MeanDur for microstate classes of MS4, MS5, and MS6 (p <
0.05). In the EEG-without-delta band, GEV, Cov, and Occ significantly increased for MS1 and MS3 (p <
0.01) and decreased for MS2 and MS4 (p <
0.05) during unconsciousness. Notably, microstate features in the EEG-without-delta band showed better sensitivity for discriminating conscious states, achieving a classification accuracy of 0.944. These findings emphasize the importance of frequency-specific microstate analysis in unraveling the neural dynamics of anesthesia-induced unconsciousness and highlight its potential clinical applications for improving anesthesia depth monitoring.