⚠️ Do Not Repeatedly Reset a Breaker That Trips Immediately
A breaker that trips the instant it's reset has an active fault — a short circuit, a ground fault, or an internal failure. Repeated resetting against an active fault forces current through the fault point, generating heat and arc damage. Reset once, observe whether it holds. If it trips immediately again: turn it off and leave it off until a licensed electrician diagnoses the fault. You cannot reset your way past an active fault.
⚡ Quick Summary
- Trips instantly at reset: active short circuit, ground fault, or internal failure — stop resetting, call electrician
- Trips after minutes under load: overloaded circuit — reduce load; or failing thermal element if load is light
- Trips only with one specific appliance: the appliance is the problem, not the breaker
- Trips randomly with light or no load: failing breaker, loose panel bus connection, or wiring/neutral fault
- Trips at flicker or switch closure: AFCI detecting arcing — a wiring issue, not a bad breaker
- Never trips despite obvious fault signs: the most dangerous scenario — breaker may have failed open; call electrician immediately
The Right First Question: Is This the Breaker — or What the Breaker Is Protecting Against?
Before asking "is this breaker bad," ask: "why did it trip?" A breaker tripping correctly is not a bad breaker — it's the electrical system working as designed. A 15-amp breaker that trips when you run a 1500-watt space heater and a microwave simultaneously is doing its job. A breaker that trips when nothing is plugged in is either failing or revealing a wiring fault. The distinction determines everything about how to respond.
The trip timing — instant, after flicker, after minutes, at appliance startup — is the most useful single piece of information for narrowing the cause before calling an electrician.
The Trip Timing Tells You the Mechanism
Is It the Breaker, the Wiring, or the Appliance?
9 Causes of Breaker Trips and What Each Means
The 5-Step Homeowner Diagnostic
Trip Pattern Quick Reference
| Trip Pattern | Likely Cause | Is It the Breaker? | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trips instantly on reset | Active short or ground fault | Possibly internal failure | Don't reset again. Call electrician. |
| Trips after several minutes under load | Overloaded circuit | No — breaker is working | Reduce load. Add circuit if needed. |
| Trips with tiny loads only | Thermal element degraded | Yes — breaker is failing | Call electrician to replace. |
| Trips randomly, no load pattern | Thermal fatigue or loose bus | Possibly | Call electrician to test. |
| Trips only with one appliance | Failing appliance motor | No — test the appliance | Test appliance on another circuit. |
| AFCI trips with flicker at switch closure | Arcing at loose connection | No — wiring fault | See AFCI guide. Call electrician. |
| Two breakers trip simultaneously | MWBC neutral fault | No | See MWBC guide. Call electrician. |
| Trips with nothing connected | Wiring fault in fixed circuit | Possibly | Call electrician — don't restore power. |
| Breaker feels hot at light load | Internal resistance or loose bus | Yes — needs evaluation | Call electrician promptly. |
| Handle spongy or won't latch | Mechanical latch wear | Yes — breaker failing | Replace the breaker. |
What You Can Do vs. When to Call
- Reset the breaker once — correctly (to OFF first, then to ON)
- Unplug everything and test whether breaker holds with no load
- Add loads back one at a time to identify the fault source
- Test a suspect appliance on a different circuit of the same amperage
- Calculate total circuit load to determine if it's an overload
- Test AFCI/GFCI breakers monthly with the TEST button
- Breaker trips immediately on reset with all loads disconnected
- Opening the panel for any inspection or replacement
- Testing a breaker with a meter or load tester
- Two breakers tripping simultaneously — MWBC issue
- AFCI trips with flicker — arcing in fixed wiring
- Any burning smell, warm breaker, or spongy handle
Frequently Asked Questions
Key Takeaways
- The trip timing is the most useful single clue: instant = short or active fault; after flicker = AFCI arcing; after minutes = overload; at startup = motor inrush. Use it to distinguish whether the breaker is doing its job or failing.
- The most important homeowner diagnostic: unplug everything and reset. If it trips with nothing connected, the fault is in the fixed wiring — don't restore power, call an electrician. If it holds, add loads back one at a time to find the source.
- Most tripping breakers are working correctly. The fault is in a connected appliance, an overloaded circuit, or a wiring issue. Replacing the breaker without identifying the actual cause will result in the new breaker tripping on the same condition.
- A breaker that never trips despite obvious fault conditions is the most dangerous scenario. Press the TEST button on AFCI/GFCI breakers monthly to verify protective function is active.
- All physical breaker work — inspection, testing, replacement — requires opening the panel and belongs to a licensed electrician.