⚠️ Dead Outlet With Heat, Buzzing, or Burning Smell — Turn Off the Breaker
A dead outlet that is also warm to the touch, makes buzzing or crackling sounds, or has a burning smell is not simply dead — it has an active arcing fault. Power is present at the connection point but isn't reaching the outlet face because the connection has failed. Turn off the circuit breaker for that circuit immediately and call a licensed electrician before restoring power.
⚡ Quick Summary
- Check three things first — in order: (1) the breaker, (2) any upstream GFCI outlets, (3) whether the outlet is on a wall switch
- A tripped GFCI upstream is the most commonly missed cause — it may be in a different room on a different circuit
- If multiple outlets in the same area are dead, the break is upstream — look for the GFCI or the point where the daisy chain interrupted
- An open neutral can leave an outlet appearing dead while the hot conductor is still energized — a shock hazard that looks like a simple dead outlet
- If heat, buzzing, or smell accompanies the dead outlet: don't troubleshoot further — turn off the circuit and call an electrician
The 3-Step Check Before Anything Else
Most dead outlets are resolved in under two minutes once you know the three upstream causes to check first. These cost nothing and require no tools.
How Serious Is It?
10 Reasons an Outlet Stops Working
The 10-Minute Diagnostic
What Your Pattern Tells You
| What You Observe | Most Likely Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| One outlet dead, all others on circuit work | Failed back-stab, worn contact, or local splice failure | Call an electrician to open the box and inspect. |
| Multiple outlets in area dead, no tripped breaker | Upstream GFCI tripped | Find and reset all GFCIs in garage, bathrooms, basement. |
| All outlets on one circuit dead | Tripped circuit breaker | Reset breaker: OFF all the way, then ON. |
| Only one slot of a duplex outlet works | Switched outlet, or one back-stab failed on the hot side only | Toggle wall switches. If not switched, call an electrician. |
| Outlet intermittent — works when plug is adjusted | Worn outlet contact tension | Replace the outlet. |
| Dead outlet is warm or buzzes | Active arcing fault at connection point | Turn off breaker. Call electrician today. |
| Circuit dead after storm | Utility outage or service-entry fault | Check neighbors. If isolated to your home: call electrician. |
| Outlet dead; GFCI resets don't help; breaker fine | Open neutral, failed wirenut, or broken daisy-chain | Call a licensed electrician — wiring fault in fixed circuit. |
What You Can Do vs. When to Call
- Confirm the outlet is dead using a known-working device
- Reset the circuit breaker correctly: fully to OFF, then to ON
- Find and press RESET on all GFCI outlets in the search area
- Toggle every wall switch in the room to check for switched outlets
- Check whether the outlet faceplate is warm or has any odor
- Check whether a range of outlets are dead to help identify the scope
- Opening the outlet box to inspect or repair connections
- Diagnosing or repairing an open neutral
- Locating a failed wirenut or broken daisy-chain in upstream boxes
- Any outlet that is warm, buzzing, or smells burned
- Repeated breaker trips on reset — active fault on the circuit
- Any home with aluminum branch-circuit wiring
Frequently Asked Questions
Key Takeaways
- Check three things first — in order: (1) reset the circuit breaker correctly (OFF then ON), (2) find and reset all upstream GFCI outlets, (3) toggle wall switches in the room. These three steps resolve the majority of dead outlet calls.
- A tripped GFCI is the most commonly missed cause. The GFCI controlling your dead outlet may be in a completely different room — garage, bathroom, or basement. Press RESET on every GFCI you can find.
- An open neutral leaves the outlet appearing dead but with the hot conductor still energized. Don't probe a dead outlet — the hot may still be live even though nothing works.
- A dead outlet that is also warm, buzzing, or smells burned has an active arcing fault. Turn off the circuit breaker and call an electrician — don't troubleshoot further.
- If the 3-step check doesn't resolve it, the fault is a wiring issue requiring professional diagnosis. Stop at that point and call a licensed electrician.