Code-Required Locations • Troubleshoot Nuisance Trips • GFCI Breakers • Licensed • (239) 888-8888
Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) protection is required by the National Electrical Code in kitchens, bathrooms, garages, outdoors, crawl spaces, unfinished basements, boat docks, and near pools and hot tubs. Homes built before the 1970s and 1980s often have no GFCI protection at all in these locations — a code violation and a genuine shock hazard. ElectriciansX installs GFCI outlets and GFCI breakers throughout Southwest Florida, and troubleshoots outlets that won’t reset or trip without apparent cause.
Estero is one of Southwest Florida’s fastest-growing planned communities — home to neighborhoods like Pelican Sound, Shadow Wood at the Brooks, and Estero Bay Preserve — where residential electrical upgrades are in constant demand. Many Lee County homes — especially those built in the 1980s and 1990s — still have unprotected outlets in code-required GFCI locations. Whether you need a single bathroom outlet upgraded or a whole-home GFCI compliance inspection, ElectriciansX handles it.

From a single outlet upgrade to whole-home GFCI compliance — we handle every situation.
Install new GFCI outlets in kitchens, bathrooms, garages, outdoors, and other code-required locations. We also wire downstream outlets to be protected by a single upstream GFCI.
Replace a failed or worn GFCI outlet. GFCI outlets have a lifespan of 10–15 years and can fail while appearing functional. We test and replace faulty units.
A GFCI breaker protects every outlet on an entire circuit from the panel. Ideal for garages, bathrooms, and outdoor circuits where multiple outlets need protection.
Nuisance trips — GFCI outlets that trip without an obvious cause — are usually caused by moisture ingress, a wiring fault, or a daisy-chained load issue. We diagnose and resolve the root cause.
We audit all code-required GFCI locations in your home and bring every outlet into NEC compliance — useful for pre-sale inspections and insurance requirements.
Garages and outdoor outlets must be GFCI-protected per Florida code. We upgrade existing circuits and install new weatherproof GFCI outlets for exterior locations.
We identify all NEC-required GFCI locations in your home — kitchens, bathrooms, garages, outdoors, near pools and spas.
We test existing outlets for proper wiring, grounding, and whether any are already protected by an upstream GFCI outlet or breaker.
We install GFCI outlets or GFCI breakers as needed, wiring downstream outlets to be protected where applicable to minimize cost.
We test every outlet downstream of each GFCI to confirm protection extends correctly throughout the circuit.
We label protected outlets and provide a summary of all GFCI locations upgraded or installed for your records.
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The NEC (adopted in Florida) requires GFCI protection in bathrooms, kitchens (within 6 ft of a sink), garages, outdoors, crawl spaces, unfinished basements, boat docks, near swimming pools and hot tubs, and in any location within 6 ft of a water source. Many older Southwest Florida homes do not have GFCI protection in all of these locations.
Nuisance tripping is usually caused by: moisture or condensation inside the outlet box (very common in Southwest Florida’s humidity), a small ground fault in a connected appliance, too many loads daisy-chained downstream of the GFCI, or a failing GFCI outlet that needs replacement. We diagnose the specific cause and fix it at the source.
A GFCI outlet protects itself and any downstream outlets wired to it, but only on that circuit. A GFCI breaker is installed in your panel and protects every outlet and device on the entire circuit — typically used when multiple outlets on the same circuit all need GFCI protection. GFCI breakers are more expensive but provide broader coverage.
Yes — a GFCI outlet can protect downstream outlets on the same circuit by wiring them through the LINE and LOAD terminals correctly. This is the most cost-effective way to bring an entire bathroom or garage circuit into compliance with a single GFCI outlet.
If a GFCI outlet won’t reset, it means there is still a ground fault present on the circuit, the outlet itself has failed (GFCI outlets last 10–15 years), or the outlet is wired with a ground fault on the LINE side that prevents reset. We test and diagnose the specific cause.
Yes. Florida follows the NEC, which requires GFCI protection for all 125V and 250V receptacles in garages, including attached and detached garages. This applies to both new construction and replacement outlets installed during a renovation.