Continuous load above roughly 80% of the breaker's rating (12 A on a 15 A, 16 A on a 20 A) heats the breaker until it trips. Moving part of the load to another circuit is the fix; resetting onto the same overload just trips again.
source-governedDiagnostic estimate. Not a quote, not a substitute for a licensed electrician.source pack dated 2026-06-20 · authority hashes pending
Where to stop. Resetting a breaker once is homeowner-safe. A breaker that keeps tripping is protecting against a real fault or overload — do not repeatedly reset it, and never tape, wedge, or oversize it. Opening the panel and any wiring repair is a licensed electrician's job. This is general information, not a quote and not a substitute for a licensed electrician.
Electrical Fault Check provides general diagnostic information only. It is not professional advice, not a quote, and not a substitute for a licensed electrician. Do not work on live wiring. If you see smoke, sparks, burning smell, heat, shock, water exposure, or repeated tripping, stop using the circuit and contact a licensed electrician or emergency services as appropriate.