What's actually causing this
Circuit breakers trip when the current drawn exceeds the breaker's rating. This happens from overloading (too many appliances on one circuit), a short circuit (hot wire touches neutral), or a ground fault (hot wire touches ground).
What you'll need
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Step-by-step fix
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1
Identify which breaker is tripping
Go to the electrical panel. Find the breaker that's in the middle position (neither fully on nor fully off). This is the tripped breaker.
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2
Turn off devices on that circuit
Unplug or turn off all devices on the affected circuit before resetting. Resetting into an overloaded circuit will just trip it again.
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3
Reset the breaker
Push the breaker firmly to the OFF position until you hear a click, then push it back to ON. If it trips again immediately, stop — there's a short circuit or ground fault.
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4
Check for overloading
Count the total wattage of devices on the circuit. A 15-amp circuit handles ~1,800 watts. A 20-amp circuit handles ~2,400 watts. High-draw appliances (microwaves, space heaters) often need their own circuit.
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5
Use an outlet tester
Plug a circuit tester into outlets on the affected circuit. A wiring fault shows as an abnormal light pattern on the tester. This tells you if a short or ground fault is present before you call an electrician.
- The breaker trips immediately after resetting — short circuit or failing breaker.
- You smell burning or see scorch marks on outlets or the panel.
- The breaker feels hot to the touch.
- Multiple breakers trip at the same time — possible main panel issue.
- The home is over 40 years old and has an older panel brand (Federal Pacific, Zinsco).
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