⚠️ Hardwired Faults Escalate Faster Than Plug-In Faults

Because lighting circuits are hardwired — not plug-in — faults inside fixtures, junction boxes, and switch boxes sit in concealed spaces where heat accumulates. A lighting circuit that trips repeatedly with visible arcing, burning smell, or unusual fixture heat has an active hazard. Stop using the circuit and call a licensed electrician before the next use.

⚡ Quick Summary

  • Instant trip at switch closure = magnetic trip = short circuit, ground fault, or arcing inside fixture or switch box
  • Delayed trip after lights have been on = thermal trip = overload, failing LED driver, or ballast breaking down under heat
  • In LED-equipped homes, a failing LED driver is the single most common cause
  • Exterior, bathroom, and garage fixtures: check for moisture intrusion first — water creating a leakage path is a fast diagnosis
  • Two breakers tripping at once, or lights dimming on an adjacent circuit = MWBC shared-neutral fault — call an electrician

Instant Trip vs. Delayed Trip — What the Timing Tells You

The single most important observation is whether the breaker trips instantly at switch closure or after the lights have been on for some time. These correspond to two different mechanisms and two different sets of causes.

⚡ Instant — Milliseconds After Switch
Short circuit, ground fault, or arcing
The magnetic trip mechanism fires within a millisecond. The fault exists at the moment of switch closure — a conductor touching metal, a short inside the fixture, moisture creating a leakage path, or arcing at a worn switch terminal. This is the more serious scenario: the hazard is present every time the circuit is energized.
🔥 Delayed — Seconds to Minutes After Switch
Overload, failing driver, or heat buildup
The thermal mechanism responds to sustained heat building in the circuit. Failing LED drivers produce startup surges that grow worse as capacitors degrade. Overloaded circuits with too many high-wattage fixtures exceed breaker capacity under sustained load. The fault worsens over time — the trip tells you the circuit is approaching or exceeding its rated capacity.

8 Causes of Lighting-Triggered Breaker Trips

01
Fixture or Switch-Box Short Circuit
Internal wiring inside fixtures is compressed by mounting hardware, canopy plates, and frame edges. Years of heat cycling cause insulation to become brittle and crack, allowing energized conductors to contact the metal fixture body. Recessed can fixtures are particularly prone to this — their thermal limit switches, loose socket cups, and restricted airflow accelerate insulation degradation. Switch boxes with back-stabbed terminals or overcrowded conductors can also arc at the point of connection.
Pattern: instant trip the moment that specific light switch is toggled. Other lights on the same circuit may work fine. Requires an electrician to open the fixture and inspect wiring.
High Risk
02
Failing LED Driver (Most Common in Modern Homes)
LED drivers degrade in predictable stages: first flicker during warm-up, then delayed turn-on, then buzzing, then heat around the driver housing. The electrolytic capacitors inside the driver age and fail, producing increasingly severe startup current spikes. When failure becomes advanced, the inrush surge resembles a near-short circuit and trips the breaker. This is the most common lighting trip cause in homes that have converted to LED fixtures.
Pattern: preceded by weeks or months of flicker or delayed startup in the same fixture. Trip may be instant or slightly delayed. Replacing the fixture or the driver (if replaceable) resolves it.
Most Common
03
Moisture or Ground Fault in Damp/Exterior Fixtures
Exterior sconces, porch lights, landscape fixtures, and bathroom vanity lights frequently accumulate moisture internally as gaskets dry out and seals fail. Water bridging conductor paths creates a leakage current or direct ground fault. GFCIs respond immediately to leakage as small as 5 milliamps. Standard breakers will also trip if moisture creates a low-resistance path to ground or neutral.
Pattern: trips occur after rain, overnight, or in humid weather. The affected fixture is exterior, in a bathroom, or in an unheated space. Reset an upstream GFCI — if it trips immediately, moisture is the likely cause.
High Risk
04
Loose or Arcing Switch Loop Connections
Older switch loops use back-stabbed or push-in terminal connections that loosen from heat cycling over years. As the connection loosens, the switch creates a brief arc every time it's toggled — a small but sharp fault waveform that AFCI breakers detect and trip on. Standard breakers may also trip if arcing is severe. The symptom occurs precisely at switch closure because that's when the faulty connection is stressed.
Pattern: crackling or hesitation noticed when toggling the switch. Trip is instant at closure. Replacing the switch with a screwdown-terminal switch (not back-stabbed) often resolves it.
Investigate
05
Loose Splices in Daisy-Chained Junction Boxes
Lighting circuits typically daisy-chain through multiple ceiling and wall boxes. A single weak wirenut or failing splice anywhere in the chain can destabilize the entire branch. When a light energizes and draws current, the splice is stressed — producing a voltage drop, arc, or outright open that the breaker or AFCI detects. Loose neutrals in the chain produce the additional symptom of flicker or dimming in other fixtures on the same circuit.
Pattern: multiple fixtures behave erratically; some flicker when others switch on. The circuit is unreliable across multiple locations, not just one fixture.
Investigate
06
MWBC Shared-Neutral Instability
Multi-wire branch circuits share one neutral between two hot legs. A loose neutral splice causes return current to become unstable when a lighting load energizes, creating momentary voltage imbalance. AFCI breakers trip on the resulting waveform distortion. The diagnostic signature is distinctive: two breakers trip simultaneously, or lights on an apparently unrelated circuit dim noticeably when you switch on a light.
Pattern: two breakers trip at the same time, or lights elsewhere dim when this switch is toggled. Do not reset either breaker without professional evaluation. This is a shock and fire hazard.
Call Pro
07
Overloaded Lighting Circuit
While LEDs dramatically reduce per-fixture wattage, older homes may have high-wattage decorative lighting, attic or garage loads tied into the same 15-amp branch, or ceiling fan/light combinations with motor inrush. If the circuit is already loaded when a light is switched on, the additional startup surge can briefly exceed rated capacity — producing a delayed rather than instant trip.
Pattern: delayed trip (seconds after switch), circuit serves many fixtures, the specific trip happens when multiple lights are already on. Reducing circuit load or adding a dedicated circuit resolves it.
Investigate
08
Fluorescent Ballast Failure
Magnetic and electronic fluorescent ballasts fail with age, producing capacitor breakdown, internal shorts, or severe startup surges. The failure is often preceded by buzzing, flickering, slow warm-up, or a burning odor from the fixture. When the ballast reaches terminal failure, the startup current spike is enough to trip the breaker.
Pattern: applies to fluorescent fixtures only. Preceded by audible buzzing or flicker. Replacing the ballast or converting the fixture to LED resolves it.
Investigate

Step-by-Step Diagnostic Guide

1
Note whether the trip is instant or delayed
Instant = magnetic trip = short, arcing, or ground fault. Delayed = thermal trip = overload or failing component. This single observation cuts the cause list in half before you do anything else.
2
Identify which switch triggers the trip
If only one specific switch trips the breaker while others on the same circuit work normally, the fault is localized to that switch, its switch box, or the fixture it controls. If every switch on the circuit trips it, the fault is upstream — in the panel, main feed, or a shared junction box.
3
Replace the bulb with a known-good LED
If the problem is a failing LED driver integrated into the bulb itself (common in cheap bulbs), replacing it with a quality LED bulb resolves it. If tripping continues with a new bulb, the fault is in the fixture wiring, driver, or switch — not the bulb.
4
For exterior or bathroom fixtures: reset the upstream GFCI first
Exterior, garage, bathroom, and outdoor circuits are often protected by a GFCI outlet located elsewhere — in a garage, utility room, or other bathroom. Find and reset that GFCI. If the light works after resetting, the GFCI detected a ground fault (likely moisture). The cause should still be investigated — don't ignore repeated GFCI trips on the same fixture.
5
Inspect accessible fixtures for moisture, rust, or heat
With the circuit off, look inside the fixture globe or housing for condensation, rust staining, or water marks. Check whether the fixture housing feels unusually warm after the brief moment it was on. Any signs of moisture or overheating point directly to the cause.
6
Watch for circuit-wide symptoms
If other lights on the same circuit flicker or dim when the problematic switch is toggled, a loose neutral or failing splice somewhere in the daisy chain is the likely cause. If lights on a different circuit also dim or flicker, MWBC shared-neutral instability is the more likely diagnosis — call an electrician.
7
Stop if two breakers trip simultaneously
Two breakers tripping at the same time when a light is switched on is the signature of MWBC shared-neutral failure. Do not reset either breaker. This is a shock hazard and requires an electrician before the circuits are used again.

What Your Pattern Tells You

What HappensMost Likely CauseAction
Instant trip, one specific switch onlyShort or arcing in that fixture or switch boxStop using that circuit. Have an electrician open the fixture.
Delayed trip after lights run for a few minutesFailing LED driver or overloaded circuitReplace suspect bulbs/fixtures. Check circuit load count.
Trip preceded by weeks of flicker or buzzingLED driver or ballast at end of lifeReplace the fixture or driver. Often homeowner-accessible.
Exterior/bathroom light trips after rain or overnightMoisture intrusion creating ground faultReset upstream GFCI. Inspect fixture for water ingress.
Other lights flicker when this switch is toggledLoose splice or neutral in shared daisy chainCall an electrician to inspect junction boxes on the circuit.
Two breakers trip at the same timeMWBC shared-neutral faultDo not reset. Call a licensed electrician immediately.
Burning smell or visible scorch on fixture/switchActive arcing — fire hazardLeave circuit off. Call an electrician today.
⚠️
Recessed Can Lights: Higher Risk Than Standard Fixtures
Recessed fixtures (can lights) run hotter than surface-mounted fixtures and have a thermal limit switch that cuts power if overheating occurs — a symptom sometimes mistaken for a breaker trip. More importantly, their internal wiring is exposed to high temperatures over years, making insulation breakdown more common. If a recessed fixture is the source of repeated trips, have an electrician verify whether it's rated for insulation contact (IC-rated) if attic insulation is nearby, and inspect internal wiring for heat damage.
T.A.
From the Expert
"The LED driver issue has become the most common lighting trip I see in the last few years, and it catches homeowners off guard because LEDs are supposed to last 20 years. The bulb itself usually does — it's the driver that fails first, especially in cheap integrated fixtures. The pattern is always the same: the homeowner noticed flicker six months ago, then delayed turn-on, then it started tripping the breaker. By the time I arrive, the driver is completely failed. The fix is replacing the fixture or, if it's a separate driver, replacing that component. What concerns me more is when a lighting circuit trips with no preceding flicker — that's usually a wiring fault or moisture, and those require opening the fixture and the box to find. I've found corroded wire nuts in damp exterior fixture boxes that were arcing on every switch closure. The homeowner had been resetting the breaker for months."
— T.A., NFPA CFI-1 · Licensed Electrician · CHFM · OSHA 30

What You Can Do vs. When to Call

✓ Homeowner-Accessible
  • Note timing (instant vs. delayed) and which specific switch triggers the trip
  • Replace bulbs with known-good LEDs to rule out a failing integrated driver
  • Reset upstream GFCI outlets for exterior, bathroom, or garage circuits
  • Visually inspect accessible fixtures for moisture, rust, or heat discoloration (circuit off)
  • Replace a fluorescent fixture with an LED fixture if ballast failure is suspected
  • Document the pattern — timing, which switch, whether other lights flicker — for the electrician
✗ Licensed Electrician Required
  • Opening fixtures to inspect or repair internal wiring
  • Accessing junction boxes to locate loose splices or failing wirenuts
  • Diagnosing or repairing MWBC shared-neutral faults
  • Any circuit producing burning smell, visible scorch marks, or repeated arcing
  • Correcting back-stabbed switch connections or replacing switch loop wiring
  • Two breakers tripping simultaneously — do not reset, call immediately

Frequently Asked Questions

My light worked fine for years and now trips the breaker. What changed?
Several things change gradually over time in a lighting circuit. LED driver capacitors degrade over thousands of hours of operation, eventually producing startup surges that trip breakers — this is the most common reason a previously reliable LED fixture starts tripping. Fixture wiring insulation becomes brittle from years of heat cycling, eventually cracking and allowing conductors to contact metal. Wirenut connections in junction boxes loosen from thermal expansion and contraction. Switch terminal connections fatigue. None of these failures happen suddenly — they develop over years and cross a threshold where the breaker starts responding. The problem has usually been developing for a long time before the first trip.
Could the dimmer switch be causing the trip?
Yes — dimmer switches are a frequently overlooked cause of lighting circuit trips. Dimmers that aren't rated for the LED fixtures they control can produce unstable waveforms and current spikes that AFCI breakers detect as arcing. Dimmers loaded beyond their rated wattage overheat internally and may fail in ways that trip the circuit. Older dimmers designed for incandescent loads produce incompatible waveforms when driving LEDs. If your tripping started after installing a new dimmer or converting to LED bulbs with an existing dimmer, the dimmer is a strong suspect. Replace with an LED-compatible dimmer rated for the load.
Is it safe to use a different light on that circuit while I wait for an electrician?
It depends on what you've been able to isolate. If you've confirmed the fault is in one specific fixture — for example, it trips only when that fixture's switch is toggled and not when others on the same circuit are used — then using the circuit for other fixtures while avoiding that one switch is relatively low risk. However, if the fault source is unknown, if the trip is circuit-wide (all switches trip it), or if there's any burning smell or evidence of arcing anywhere in the circuit, don't use any part of it. Faults in concealed junction boxes can affect the entire branch even when only one fixture is obviously symptomatic.
My outdoor light keeps tripping its GFCI after rain. Do I need a new GFCI or a new fixture?
Almost certainly a new fixture, not a new GFCI. If the GFCI trips reliably after rain or in humid conditions, it's detecting real moisture-induced ground-fault leakage inside the fixture — which is exactly what it's supposed to do. Replacing the GFCI would just give you a new device detecting the same fault. The fix is identifying and eliminating the moisture path: replacing deteriorated weatherstripping or gaskets, resealing the fixture, replacing a fixture whose housing has cracked with age, or relocating a fixture that's accumulating water inside. If the fixture is old and not rated for wet locations (look for a "wet location" UL listing on the label), it needs to be replaced with one that is.

Key Takeaways

  • Timing is your first and most useful clue: instant = magnetic trip (short, arcing, ground fault); delayed = thermal trip (overload, failing driver).
  • In LED-equipped homes, a failing LED driver is the single most common cause — usually preceded by weeks of flicker or delayed startup before tripping begins.
  • Exterior and bathroom fixtures that trip after rain have moisture intrusion. Reset the upstream GFCI; if it trips immediately, the fixture needs inspection or replacement.
  • Two breakers tripping simultaneously when a light is switched on = MWBC shared-neutral fault. Do not reset. Call a licensed electrician.
  • Because lighting circuits are hardwired, arcing faults in concealed boxes are a fire risk. Don't keep resetting a trip without identifying the cause first.