⚠️ A Breaker That Never Trips Is the Most Dangerous Failure Mode

A breaker that trips too often is annoying. A breaker that has internally failed and no longer trips during genuine overloads or faults is a fire hazard — because the circuit now has no overcurrent protection. If you suspect a breaker isn't responding to faults (the circuit runs hot or shows other fault signs but the breaker stays on), call a licensed electrician immediately. Do not attempt to test a breaker by intentionally overloading the circuit.

⚡ Quick Summary

  • Trips unpredictably with no pattern: thermal fatigue or calibration drift — breaker is losing accuracy
  • Breaker feels noticeably hot: internal resistance buildup or a loose panel bus connection — not just the breaker problem
  • Handle feels spongy or won't latch: mechanical latch failure — replace before it fails to hold during a fault
  • Buzzing under load: magnetic trip instability — requires testing by an electrician
  • Never trips during obvious faults: welded contacts or seized mechanism — replace immediately
  • Flickering lights on a circuit are almost never caused by the breaker — they point to wiring or neutral issues

How Breakers Work — and How They Wear Out

A standard circuit breaker uses two distinct protection mechanisms to respond to two different fault types. Understanding which mechanism handles which fault explains why different failure modes produce different symptoms.

■ Thermal Mechanism
Responds to sustained overload
A bimetallic strip bends as it heats from sustained overcurrent — the higher the overload, the faster the strip bends and trips the breaker. A 20% overload may take many minutes; a 100% overload trips in seconds. Designed for gradual overload protection.
Fails: from thermal fatigue over thousands of heat cycles. A fatigued thermal element trips earlier than it should (nuisance trips at low loads) or, in later failure, loses calibration entirely.
■ Magnetic Mechanism
Responds to short circuits
An electromagnetic coil generates an instantaneous trip force when short-circuit current — typically 5–20x the rated amperage — flows through it. Designed for fast response to the massive current surge of a direct short. Trips in under 20 milliseconds.
Fails: from corrosion or dust fouling the trip mechanism, or from contacts that have welded together from repeated high-current events. A failed magnetic mechanism may trip too slowly, too reluctantly, or not at all during a genuine short circuit.

AFCI and GFCI breakers add electronics to these mechanical mechanisms: a microprocessor (AFCI) monitoring waveform for arc signatures, or a current-balance transformer (GFCI) monitoring hot-neutral balance. These electronic components add failure modes not present in standard breakers — capacitor degradation, firmware issues, and sensing element drift — and they typically fail sooner than the 20–40 year lifespan of standard breakers.

8 Breaker Failure Symptoms and What Each Means

01
Random or Inconsistent Tripping With No Obvious Load Pattern
The breaker trips at different times with different loads — not correlating with a consistent heavy draw event. It may trip when the circuit is lightly loaded, or trip after working fine for weeks then trip repeatedly for a few days. The trip pattern is unpredictable.
Calibration drift or thermal fatigue in the bimetallic strip. The strip has lost its original calibration from years of heat cycles and now bends at unpredictable thresholds. Also possible: a loose bus stab connection is creating heat at the breaker base that the thermal mechanism interprets as overcurrent.
Thermal Failure
02
Breaker Feels Noticeably Hot to the Touch
Touching the breaker toggle or face — carefully, with the back of a finger — it feels distinctly warmer than adjacent breakers at similar loads, or it's hot enough to be uncomfortable. Note: all loaded breakers run slightly warm; the concern is a breaker that is noticeably hotter than its neighbors or hot to a degree you wouldn't expect for its circuit's current draw.
Internal resistance buildup within the breaker, or a loose connection between the breaker and the panel bus stab. Both produce the same symptom — heat — and both require an electrician to distinguish. A hot breaker that continues to overheat will eventually damage the surrounding panel bus and adjacent breakers, turning a single-breaker replacement into a panel-level repair. Don't delay.
Needs Evaluation
03
Handle Feels Spongy, Mushy, or Won't Latch Firmly
When toggling the breaker, the handle doesn't produce a clean, definitive click into the ON or OFF position. It feels loose, springy, or sits in a slightly ambiguous position. Pushing it to ON doesn't produce the firm snap of a good breaker; you're not sure if it's fully engaged.
Mechanical latch failure in the breaker mechanism. The toggle's internal latch has worn to the point where it no longer holds the breaker reliably in position. A breaker with a failed latch may not remain in the ON position under vibration, or may fail to hold the trip position during a fault — allowing current to continue flowing after the mechanism has tried to trip. Replace before the latch fails completely.
Replace
04
Trips Under Very Small Loads — Loads That Shouldn't Cause a Trip
A 15-amp breaker trips when you plug in a phone charger. A 20-amp breaker trips when a single light comes on. The circuit load at the time of the trip is clearly well below the breaker's rated capacity — this isn't an overload event, it's the breaker responding to current it should handle easily.
Degraded thermal element: the bimetallic strip has reached a failure state where it bends at currents far below its rated threshold. The breaker may have reached the end of its service life, or it may have been repeatedly overloaded earlier in its service life in ways that permanently deformed the strip. Either way, calibration is lost and the breaker needs replacement.
Replace
05
Buzzing or Vibrating Under Load
Audible buzzing or vibration from the breaker itself — distinct from electrical hum elsewhere in the panel — that appears or worsens when the circuit is loaded. The sound comes from this specific breaker, not from adjacent breakers or the panel enclosure.
Magnetic trip mechanism instability, or voltage fluctuation on the bus that the breaker is translating into mechanical vibration. A buzzing magnetic mechanism may trip too slowly or inconsistently during a genuine short circuit. Voltage instability is a separate issue that may be MWBC or service-entry related. Either way, a buzzing breaker requires an electrician with a meter to test — and should not be left in service while buzzing.
Test Urgently
06
Breaker Never Trips During Obvious Fault Conditions — Most Dangerous
The circuit shows clear signs of a fault — wiring runs hot, outlets feel warm, appliances struggle under load that would normally trip a working breaker — but the breaker stays on. Or: a breaker that has tripped many times over the years never trips anymore, even in conditions where you would expect it to. The breaker appears functional but isn't responding.
Welded contacts or seized trip mechanism. Repeated fault events or high-current trips can weld the breaker's contacts together, preventing the mechanism from physically separating them. Or internal corrosion has frozen the trip linkage. The circuit now has no overcurrent protection. This is the most dangerous failure mode because the breaker still provides the appearance of protection while offering none. Call an electrician immediately.
Emergency — Replace Now
07
AFCI/GFCI Breaker: Won't Reset, TEST Button Doesn't Work, Trips Without Loads
For AFCI or GFCI breakers: the reset button doesn't restore power even with all loads disconnected, the TEST button doesn't trip the breaker when pressed, or the breaker trips immediately on reset with nothing connected to the circuit. The electronic component is malfunctioning independent of any circuit fault.
Internal electronic failure in the AFCI or GFCI sensing circuitry. Capacitors, sensing transformers, and microprocessor components in these devices have a shorter service life than the mechanical breaker components — typically 10–15 years for AFCI electronics, though this varies by manufacturer and duty cycle. The TEST button not working is particularly significant: it means the protective function cannot be verified. The breaker should be replaced. Always test AFCI/GFCI breakers monthly with the TEST button to detect this failure before it becomes invisible.
Electronic Failure
08
Legacy Panel Breakers (Zinsco, FPE, Pushmatic, Bryant)
Any symptoms on breakers in panels manufactured by Federal Pacific Electric (FPE Stab-Lok), Zinsco, or Pushmatic. These panels have documented failure rates significantly above modern standards — breakers that don't trip during faults, bus connections that arc and overheat, and circuit breaker-to-bus connections that fail to make proper electrical contact.
These panel types are considered high-risk by the electrical industry and fire investigation community. FPE Stab-Lok in particular has a well-documented history of breakers failing to trip during overcurrent events. If you have one of these panels, have an electrician evaluate it regardless of whether any symptoms are currently visible. Home insurance companies often require replacement as a condition of coverage. The repair for legacy panel failures is typically full panel replacement.
Panel Evaluation Needed
⚠️
Flicker Is Almost Never a Breaker Problem
Light flicker on a circuit is frequently (and incorrectly) attributed to a failing breaker. In the vast majority of cases, flicker points to loose wiring, neutral instability, or MWBC issues — not the breaker. A breaker's job is to interrupt current when limits are exceeded; it doesn't generate the kind of intermittent, low-level disturbances that produce visible flicker in LED drivers. If your working hypothesis for flicker is a bad breaker, see the companion lighting flicker articles first. You'll find the actual cause faster.

Diagnostic Decision Tree

⚡ Match Your Symptom to a Cause

  • Trips immediately on reset, nothing connected → Internal failure or short circuit on the fixed wiring. Test with an electrician. May be a bad breaker or a wiring fault.
  • Trips randomly, no load pattern → Thermal fatigue or calibration drift. Also rule out a loose bus stab — requires electrician to inspect the breaker seat.
  • Trips after several minutes under load → Sustained overload or thermal sensitivity; may be a legitimately overloaded circuit or a degraded thermal element.
  • Breaker hot to the touch → Internal resistance or loose bus connection. Don't delay — this damages surrounding panel components if left.
  • Handle mushy or won't latch firmly → Mechanical latch failure. Replace before it fails to hold position during a fault.
  • Buzzing under load → Magnetic instability or voltage fluctuation. Test with an electrician.
  • Never trips despite obvious fault signs → Welded contacts or seized mechanism. Emergency — call electrician now.
  • Symptoms go away when specific device is moved → The device is the problem, not the breaker.
  • Flicker on the circuit → Almost certainly wiring or neutral issue, not the breaker. See flicker guides.

Step-by-Step Homeowner Diagnostic

1
Map the trip pattern: predictable or random?
Does the breaker trip after the same specific load is applied (predictable = overloaded circuit or short in a device), or at random times with no consistent load pattern (random = thermal fatigue, calibration drift, or loose bus stab)? Write down three or four recent trip events and what was on the circuit each time.
2
Move the suspect load to another circuit
Plug the device or appliance that seems to be triggering the trip into a different circuit of the same amperage. If the trip follows the device to the other circuit: the device is the problem. If the original breaker continues tripping with different loads: the breaker or panel bus is the problem.
3
Check the breaker temperature briefly — back of hand only
With the panel cover closed, hold the back of your hand near (not touching) the breaker face. Any heat you can feel from several inches away without contact = hot breaker. Do not open the panel cover. If the breaker is noticeably warmer than its neighbors, call an electrician — this is a hot-breaker condition regardless of tripping behavior.
4
Check the latch feel on reset
When resetting the breaker (push fully to OFF first, then to ON), note the feel. Does it snap crisply into each position? Or does it feel mushy, springy, or ambiguous? A clean snap = mechanical mechanism intact. A spongy feel = latch wear. Report this to the electrician along with the trip pattern information.
5
For AFCI/GFCI breakers: test the TEST button monthly
Press the TEST button on AFCI and GFCI breakers monthly. It should trip the breaker. Pressing RESET should restore power. If TEST doesn't trip the breaker, or if RESET doesn't restore power with nothing connected: the protective function may be non-operational. Call an electrician.

Symptom Reference Table

SymptomMost Likely CauseAction
Trips at random, no load patternThermal fatigue or loose bus stabCall electrician to test and inspect panel seat.
Breaker noticeably hotInternal resistance or loose bus connectionCall electrician promptly — damages surrounding components.
Handle spongy or won't latchMechanical latch wearReplace — do not leave a failed latch in service.
Trips under tiny loadsDegraded thermal elementReplace the breaker.
Buzzes under loadMagnetic instability or voltage fluctuationCall electrician for testing.
Never trips during faultsWelded contacts or seized mechanismEmergency — call electrician today.
AFCI/GFCI TEST button doesn't tripElectronic component failureReplace — protective function may be inactive.
Trip follows device to another circuitFaulty device, not the breakerRepair or replace the device.
Flicker on the circuitWiring or neutral issue — not the breakerSee lighting flicker diagnostic guides.
FPE Stab-Lok, Zinsco, or Pushmatic panelLegacy panel with documented failure riskHave electrician evaluate regardless of symptoms.
T.A.
From the Expert
"The failure mode that concerns me most professionally is the breaker that stops tripping. It's almost invisible — the breaker looks normal, the panel looks normal, the circuit appears to work. What's gone is the protection. I've investigated fires where the circuit was clearly overloaded — conductor insulation melted, junction boxes carbonized — and the breaker never tripped. Welded contacts from a previous high-current event. The occupants had no idea the breaker was non-functional. The hot-breaker symptom is the one homeowners can actually detect. If a breaker is noticeably hotter than its neighbors, something is wrong — either the breaker internally or the bus connection below it. I get calls where homeowners say 'the breaker has been running warm for years.' That's years of panel bus damage accumulating. The fix for a single bad breaker is cheap. The fix for a damaged bus requires more work. Catch it while it's just the breaker."
— T.A., NFPA CFI-1 · Licensed Electrician · CHFM · OSHA 30

What You Can Do vs. When to Call

✓ Homeowner-Accessible
  • Observe and document trip patterns: predictable or random, timing, what load was on
  • Move suspect loads to another circuit to test whether the fault follows the device
  • Feel near the breaker for heat (back of hand, don't touch, panel cover closed)
  • Note whether the latch snaps cleanly or feels spongy on reset
  • Test AFCI/GFCI breakers monthly with the TEST button
  • Check for any legacy panel brand (FPE, Zinsco, Pushmatic)
✗ Licensed Electrician Required
  • Opening the panel cover to inspect or replace any breaker
  • Testing a breaker with a meter or load tester
  • Inspecting or reseating the breaker-to-bus connection
  • Thermal imaging of the panel for hot spots
  • Replacing any breaker including AFCI/GFCI types
  • Evaluating or replacing legacy panel types

Typical Repair Costs

ServiceTypical Range
Electrician diagnostic visit + panel inspection$125 – $250
Standard single-pole breaker replacement (15A or 20A)$150 – $300
AFCI or GFCI breaker replacement$200 – $450
Bus stab repair or breaker seat correction (if feasible)$300 – $800
Full service panel replacement (100–200A)$2,500 – $6,000

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a breaker go bad without ever tripping?
Yes — and this is the most dangerous way a breaker fails. Breakers can develop internal resistance (showing as overheating) or lose magnetic sensitivity (showing as buzzing or slow trip response) without ever producing a nuisance trip. In the most serious scenario, welded contacts from a previous high-current event prevent the trip mechanism from separating the contacts at all — the breaker looks completely normal but has no protective function. This is why thermal imaging of panels by a licensed electrician is valuable even when "nothing seems wrong" — hot breakers and failing bus connections are invisible to visual inspection but detectable with a thermal camera. At minimum, AFCI and GFCI breakers should be tested monthly with the TEST button — a breaker that doesn't trip on TEST has lost its electronic protective function.
How long do breakers last?
Standard (thermal-magnetic) breakers are typically rated for 20–40 years of service life, with quality varying significantly by manufacturer. AFCI and GFCI breakers have a shorter functional lifespan for their electronic components — typically 10–15 years for the sensing electronics, although the mechanical breaker portion may outlast this. Breakers in panels that were subjected to repeated high-fault events age faster. Breakers in panels with loose bus stab connections accumulate heat damage that shortens service life. There's no firm "replace at X years" rule — but breakers in panels approaching 30+ years that are showing any of the symptoms in this article should be evaluated rather than left in service.
Should a breaker feel warm?
Slightly warm is normal for a loaded breaker. A breaker carrying current through its contacts generates some resistive heat as part of normal operation. The concern threshold is a breaker that is noticeably warmer than its neighbors at similar load levels, or one that is uncomfortably hot to the touch. If you can hold your finger on a breaker for 10 seconds without discomfort, it's in the acceptable range. If it's too hot to hold your finger on it, or if it's significantly warmer than adjacent breakers, that indicates internal resistance or a loose bus connection that requires professional evaluation. Never compare a fully loaded 50-amp breaker to an unloaded 15-amp breaker — compare breakers at similar load proportions.
Is a buzzing breaker dangerous?
A buzzing breaker warrants professional evaluation, yes. Electrical hum from the panel as a whole is normal — it comes from the transformer-like magnetic fields in the service entry and bus bars. Buzzing from a specific breaker that appears or worsens when the circuit is loaded is different: it indicates either magnetic instability in the trip mechanism or voltage fluctuation on that circuit that the breaker's magnetic core is responding to. A magnetically unstable trip mechanism may trip too slowly or inconsistently during a short circuit. Voltage fluctuation is a separate panel or wiring issue that needs diagnosis. Either way, a breaker that's buzzing in isolation from a loaded circuit belongs on the list of items to have an electrician test — it shouldn't be the background noise of a healthy electrical system.

Key Takeaways

  • Breakers fail gradually and the symptoms are readable: random tripping (thermal fatigue), a hot handle (internal resistance or loose bus), a spongy latch (mechanical wear), buzzing under load (magnetic instability), and trips under tiny loads (degraded thermal element).
  • The most dangerous failure mode is a breaker that has stopped tripping — welded contacts, seized mechanism, or worn-out AFCI/GFCI electronics. The circuit appears normal but has no overcurrent protection.
  • Test AFCI and GFCI breakers monthly with the TEST button. A breaker that doesn't trip on TEST has lost its protective function. This test costs 10 seconds and catches silent failure.
  • Light flicker on a circuit is almost never caused by the breaker. It points to wiring or neutral issues. Don't replace a breaker for flicker without investigating those causes first.
  • All breaker work — inspection, testing, replacement — requires a licensed electrician with the panel cover removed. The only homeowner-accessible steps are observation and documentation before calling.