Step-by-step fix
Step 1: Make sure this is the right outlet to test
- Look for the TEST and RESET buttons on the face of the outlet.
- Plug in a lamp, charger, or outlet tester to confirm the outlet currently has power.
- Notice whether bathrooms, garage, kitchen, exterior, basement, or nearby outlets may be protected by this same GFCI.
If it works: You confirmed this is a GFCI outlet and you know whether it is powered before testing.
If it doesn’t: If the outlet has no TEST and RESET buttons, this is not a standard GFCI outlet. Check for another GFCI upstream or a tripped breaker instead.
Stop if:- The outlet face is cracked, loose, scorched, warm, buzzing, or smells burned.
- The outlet is wet or located where you cannot test it without standing in water or touching damp surfaces.
Step 2: Test the built-in trip function
- Leave the lamp or tester plugged in.
- Press the TEST button firmly until it clicks.
- Watch the lamp or tester to see if power shuts off right away.
If it works: Power to the outlet turned off when you pressed TEST.
If it doesn’t: If the outlet stays powered, try pressing TEST again firmly. If it still does not trip, the GFCI may have failed or may be wired incorrectly and should be evaluated before you rely on it.
Stop if:- Pressing TEST causes sparking, crackling, or any sign of overheating.
Step 3: Reset the outlet and confirm power returns
- Press the RESET button firmly until it clicks and stays in.
- Check the lamp or tester again.
- If the outlet was feeding other outlets, see whether power returned there too.
If it works: The outlet reset normally and power came back on.
If it doesn’t: If RESET will not stay in, unplug everything on that circuit and try once more. If it still will not reset, check for a tripped breaker, a lost upstream power feed, or a failed GFCI.
Stop if:- The RESET button will not stay in and the outlet shows burn marks, looseness, or signs of water intrusion.
Step 4: Check any downstream outlets it protects
- Plug your lamp or tester into nearby outlets that may be protected by this GFCI.
- Press TEST on the GFCI again and see which outlets lose power.
- Press RESET and confirm those same outlets come back on.
If it works: You identified whether this GFCI protects only itself or also protects other outlets downstream.
If it doesn’t: If nearby outlets behave inconsistently, label the ones that are protected and consider having the wiring checked if the protection pattern does not make sense.
Stop if:- A downstream outlet loses power but shows damage, heat, discoloration, or loose mounting.
Step 5: Use a plug-in tester as a second check
- With the GFCI reset, plug in the outlet tester and read the light pattern.
- Compare the lights to the tester legend to see whether the outlet appears wired normally.
- If your tester has a GFCI test button, press it and confirm the GFCI trips, then press RESET on the outlet again.
If it works: The tester shows a normal reading and the GFCI trips and resets as expected.
If it doesn’t: If the tester shows an open ground, reversed wiring, or another fault, do not rely on the outlet for protection until the wiring issue is corrected.
Stop if:- The tester indicates a wiring fault and the outlet is in a critical-use area where safe grounding and protection matter immediately, such as a bathroom, kitchen, garage, exterior, or basement.
Step 6: Verify the repair held in normal use
- Plug a normal device back into the outlet and use it briefly.
- Make sure the GFCI stays reset and does not trip for no clear reason.
- If this outlet protects others, confirm those outlets still have power after a few minutes of normal use.
If it works: The GFCI trips when tested, resets properly, and works normally afterward.
If it doesn’t: If it trips repeatedly with ordinary loads or behaves differently from one test to the next, the outlet may be worn out, miswired, or reacting to a real fault on the circuit.
Stop if:- The outlet trips repeatedly with nothing plugged in.
- You found moisture, damaged wiring, or signs of overheating during testing.
FAQ
How often should I test a GFCI outlet?
A quick test on a regular schedule is a good habit. Many homeowners do it monthly or a few times a year, especially in bathrooms, kitchens, garages, basements, and outdoor locations.
What if the TEST button works but the RESET button will not stay in?
That usually means the outlet does not have proper incoming power, the breaker is tripped, there is a wiring problem, or the GFCI has failed. Unplug loads, check the breaker, and if it still will not reset, the outlet needs further diagnosis.
Can I test a GFCI outlet without an outlet tester?
Yes. The built-in TEST and RESET buttons are the main check. A lamp or charger helps you confirm power turns off and back on. A plug-in tester is just a useful second check.
Why did nearby outlets go dead when I tested one GFCI outlet?
That GFCI may protect downstream outlets on the same circuit. That is normal if they come back on when you press RESET. If the pattern seems random or some outlets do not return, the wiring may need attention.
Does a plug-in tester prove the GFCI is wired perfectly?
Not always. A plug-in tester is helpful, but it cannot catch every wiring issue. If the tester shows a fault or the outlet acts inconsistently, treat that as a real problem and have the wiring checked.