Outlet Stopped Working But the Breaker Didn’t Trip — How to Find the Problem

Outlet Stopped Working But the Breaker Didn't Trip — How to Find the Problem

One outlet is dead. You check the breaker panel — everything looks ON. No tripped breaker. This is one of the most common mysteries homeowners call us about, and the answer is almost always one of three things: a tripped GFCI you have not found yet, a loose wire at the outlet or upstream connection, or a failed outlet.

Most Common Causes

  • Upstream GFCI tripped. One GFCI in a bathroom, garage, or exterior wall can protect multiple standard outlets downstream — including in other rooms. The dead outlet may not be a GFCI at all.
  • Tripped AFCI or GFCI breaker in panel. Some circuits use breaker-type protection instead of outlet GFCIs. The breaker may be tripped even if it does not look obviously off.
  • Loose stab-in connection. Outlets pushed into the back of the device (“back-stab”) loosen over time — especially with Florida humidity cycles.
  • Broken neutral. A loose neutral can kill multiple outlets on a circuit while the breaker stays on — this is a fire hazard.

Safe DIY Troubleshooting

  1. Search for ALL GFCIs. Check bathrooms, kitchen, garage, laundry, exterior, and pool area. Press RESET on each.
  2. Firmly cycle the breaker. OFF, wait 5 seconds, ON — even if it looks fine.
  3. Test with a lamp. Plug a known-good lamp into the dead outlet after resets.
  4. Check half-hot switched outlets. A wall switch may control one half of a duplex outlet — switch ON.
  5. Stop if multiple rooms lose power. Call an electrician — possible neutral or multi-wire branch circuit issue.

See also: one outlet not working in a room and GFCI won’t reset. ElectriciansX traces dead outlet circuits across Southwest Florida daily.

Dead Outlet? We Trace the Circuit

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ElectriciansX Team
Licensed Florida Electrical Contractor

Written by the licensed electricians at ElectriciansX, serving Cape Coral, Fort Myers, Naples, and all of Southwest Florida. Questions about your project? Request a free estimate.

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