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GFCI trip cause diagnostic

GFCI trips with one appliance

Trips tied to a single device point to leakage through that appliance — isolate it by unplugging downstream loads one at a time.

Stop and call a licensed electrician or emergency services now if there's smoke, sparks, a burning smell, heat, shock, or water near the problem. Otherwise it's safe to answer the questions below.

The likely readout

Most likely cause

A downstream appliance is leaking — trips coincide with one appliance whose element or insulation is the path

Ranked by fit to your answers
1
A downstream appliance is leaking — trips coincide with one appliance whose element or insulation is the path
84
SAFE NEXT CHECKUnplug everything downstream, reset, then reintroduce devices one at a time. The appliance that trips it is the leakage source — its heating element or insulation is failing.
Where to stop. Drying a receptacle, fitting an in-use cover, and unplugging downstream loads are homeowner-safe. Replacing a GFCI or chasing a fault inside boxes means live conductors — if a GFCI keeps tripping with nothing plugged in, that's a wiring fault for a licensed electrician. This is general information, not a quote and not a substitute for a licensed electrician.
DOWNSTREAM APPLIANCE one device leaks to groundGFCIleaky load

Not your exact situation? Adjust the answers and re-rank →

What to do next

Try the safe next check above. If it doesn't resolve it, or would mean working on wiring or a panel, stop and call a licensed electrician — don't replace parts on a guess. Open the full tool to change any answer for your exact situation, or try a related check below.

source-governed · verified 2026-06-20

Sources

How this diagnostic works →