Safety

When should I call an electrician immediately?

Call an electrician immediately if you smell burning plastic near an outlet or panel, see scorch marks, hear buzzing from a switch or breaker, have outlets warm to the touch, experience repeated breaker tripping, or have lost power to part of the house. These signs indicate active fire or shock hazards.

The Full Answer

Some electrical problems will wait — a flickering bulb or a single tripped breaker is usually fine to schedule for the next business day. Others are active fire and shock hazards that need a licensed electrician on site within hours, not days.

Six conditions warrant an immediate call: (1) a burning plastic or "fishy" smell near an outlet, switch, or panel; (2) visible scorch marks, discoloration, or melted plastic around an outlet or switch; (3) buzzing, sizzling, or crackling sounds from a breaker, switch, or outlet; (4) any outlet or switch that is warm or hot to the touch; (5) a breaker that trips repeatedly within a short time; (6) sudden total or partial loss of power that isn't caused by a tripped breaker or storm.

Before we arrive, do this: unplug what you can from the affected circuit, turn off the breaker for that circuit if you can identify it, and stay out of standing water near any electrical equipment. Don't try to reset a breaker that keeps tripping — that's the safety system doing its job.

Lotus Electric provides same-day emergency electrical service across Duluth, Hermantown, Cloquet, Two Harbors, Proctor, and Esko. Call (218) 729-2953 and tell the dispatcher this is an emergency.

Reviewed by Matt Sunberg, licensed Minnesota electrician
Frequently Asked Questions

Related Questions

Is a burning smell from an outlet always an emergency?
Yes. A burning smell from an outlet means insulation is overheating and active arcing or melting may be occurring inside the wall. Turn off the breaker, leave the outlet alone, and call an electrician immediately.
My breaker keeps tripping — what does that mean?
Repeated tripping means the breaker is doing its job protecting against either an overload (too much load on one circuit) or a short circuit/ground fault (damaged wiring). Don't keep resetting it. Call an electrician to diagnose the underlying cause.
Should I shut off the main breaker before the electrician arrives?
Only if you smell smoke, see sparks, or sense an active fire risk. Otherwise, just shut off the breaker for the affected circuit. We need to test the panel with power on to diagnose accurately.

Have a Question We Did Not Cover?

Call Lotus Electric and a licensed electrician will answer it — free of charge.