Step-by-step response
- 1Identify what's on the circuit
Look at the breaker label. If unlabeled, flip the breaker off and walk the house to see what's dead. Typical kitchen circuit: countertop outlets + microwave + sometimes dishwasher. Bathroom circuit: GFCI outlet + light. Total amp draw of all loads should be ≤80% of breaker rating.
- 2Reduce load
Move one big load to a different circuit (different room). Unplug space heaters (1500W = nearly the entire 15-amp circuit). Try the breaker again.
- 3If the breaker still trips with reduced load — call an electrician
Could be: aging breaker (60-80yr panels), loose wire at an outlet, ground fault from worn insulation, aluminum-wiring connection oxidation. All same-day calls.
- 4Burning smell, scorched outlet, warm panel?
Cut the main breaker. Call electrician immediately, not tomorrow. Federal Pacific or Zinsco panels: replace ($1,800-3,200). They have a documented fire risk.
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Frequently asked
How many tries before I should stop resetting?
Reset once. If it trips again on the same load, stop. Don't reset 5+ times — each repeat carries fault current that can melt wire insulation and start a fire.
Are AFCI breakers worse than regular?
AFCI (Arc-Fault) breakers are more sensitive — they trip on patterns that look like arcing, even if not dangerous. Required by code on most 2014+ circuits. Nuisance trips are real but usually trace to a specific motor (vacuum, drill) or appliance.
Local context — Upper Arlington, OH
Tree-canopied affluent enclave west of OSU. Historic 1920s-1940s housing — drives knob-and-tube remediation and old-galvanized-pipe repipe demand.