Step-by-step fix
Step 1: Make sure a GFCI reset is the right fix
- Look for an outlet with TEST and RESET buttons near the dead outlet, bathroom, kitchen, garage, basement, laundry area, or outside receptacles.
- Check whether the problem is limited to one outlet or a small group of outlets that may be protected by the same GFCI.
- Press a nearby light switch or plug in a small lamp to confirm the outlet has actually lost power.
- If a breaker is clearly off at the panel, handle that first before assuming the GFCI itself is the only issue.
If it works: You found the tripped GFCI or confirmed that a nearby GFCI likely controls the dead outlet.
If it doesn’t: If no GFCI outlet is nearby and the dead outlet is not on a GFCI-protected circuit you can identify, check the breaker panel next or trace other nearby bathrooms, garage, exterior, or basement outlets for the reset device.
Stop if:- The outlet face is cracked, loose, scorched, melted, or smells burned.
- You hear buzzing, see sparking, or the wall feels warm around the outlet.
Step 2: Remove the likely cause before resetting
- Unplug anything connected to the tripped GFCI and any dead outlets downstream from it.
- Look for obvious moisture from a sink splash, wet countertop, damp floor, condensation, or recent outdoor use.
- Dry the area fully with a towel and give it a few minutes if the outlet or cover was damp.
- If one appliance was running when the outlet tripped, leave it unplugged until after the reset succeeds.
If it works: The outlet area is dry and the circuit is unloaded, which gives the reset the best chance to hold.
If it doesn’t: If you cannot identify what was plugged in or what got wet, still leave all loads unplugged and continue with the reset so you can isolate the cause afterward.
Stop if:- Water got into the box, wall cavity, or exterior enclosure rather than just on the surface.
- The outlet was exposed to flooding or heavy soaking.
Step 3: Reset the GFCI
- Stand on a dry surface and keep your hands dry.
- Press the RESET button firmly until it clicks or stays in.
- If it will not stay in, press TEST once, then press RESET again.
- Check whether the outlet now has power using a lamp, phone charger, or outlet tester.
If it works: The RESET button stays in and the outlet has power again.
If it doesn’t: If the button will not stay in or the outlet still has no power, check the breaker panel for a tripped breaker, then return and try one more reset with everything unplugged.
Stop if:- The reset immediately trips again with nothing plugged in.
- The outlet tester shows an open ground, open neutral, reversed polarity, or another wiring fault you are not prepared to diagnose.
Step 4: Add loads back one at a time
- Plug devices back in one at a time, starting with the simplest small load like a phone charger or lamp.
- Wait a moment after each item so you can see whether the GFCI holds.
- If the GFCI trips after one specific appliance is plugged in, leave that item unplugged.
- Check nearby downstream outlets too, since one bad appliance on the protected circuit can trip the GFCI.
If it works: The GFCI stays set with normal small loads, or you identified one device that causes the trip.
If it doesn’t: If the GFCI trips with multiple different loads or with no load at all, the outlet itself or the circuit wiring may need further diagnosis.
Stop if:- A cord, plug, or appliance shows heat damage, arcing marks, or a burning smell.
- The trip seems tied to hidden moisture in a wall, exterior box, or under-sink area.
Step 5: Test the protection function
- With power restored, press the TEST button on the GFCI.
- Confirm power shuts off at the GFCI and any outlets it protects downstream.
- Press RESET again to restore power.
- If you have an outlet tester with a GFCI test button, use it only as a basic check after the built-in TEST and RESET buttons work normally.
If it works: The GFCI trips on TEST and restores power on RESET, which shows the device is responding normally.
If it doesn’t: If TEST does nothing, RESET will not restore power, or downstream outlets behave inconsistently, the GFCI may be failed or miswired and should be inspected or replaced.
Stop if:- The built-in TEST button does not trip the outlet.
- The outlet works intermittently, trips randomly, or loses power again without any load change.
Step 6: Confirm the repair holds in real use
- Use the outlet normally for a day or two with the usual small appliances or chargers.
- Recheck the area for moisture, especially near sinks, garage doors, exterior covers, or basement humidity.
- If one appliance was the trigger, keep it off this circuit until it is repaired or replaced.
- If the GFCI stays set through normal use, the reset was successful and the original trip was likely caused by a temporary fault or wet condition.
If it works: Power stays on during normal use and the GFCI still trips and resets correctly when tested.
If it doesn’t: If it trips again under normal dry conditions with known-good loads, plan on replacing the GFCI or having the circuit diagnosed for a wiring fault.
Stop if:- The outlet keeps tripping in dry conditions with nothing plugged in.
- You find repeated moisture intrusion, loose wiring, or signs of overheating.
FAQ
Why did my GFCI trip in the first place?
Usually because it sensed current leaking where it should not, often from moisture, a faulty appliance, or a wiring problem on the protected circuit.
What if the RESET button will not stay in?
Unplug everything on that circuit, dry the area, and check the breaker panel. If it still will not stay in, the GFCI may be failed or there may be a wiring fault downstream.
Can one GFCI control other outlets?
Yes. A single GFCI outlet can protect other outlets wired downstream, which is why several dead outlets may come back when one GFCI is reset.
Should I replace a GFCI that keeps tripping?
If it trips repeatedly in dry conditions with nothing plugged in, replacement or further diagnosis is reasonable. Repeated tripping usually means the device is failing or the circuit has a real fault.
Is it safe to keep pressing RESET until it works?
No. One or two careful attempts after unplugging loads and drying the area is enough. If it keeps tripping or will not reset, stop and diagnose the cause instead of forcing it.