Why Do My Downlights Keep Blowing?
Emergency? Call now
24/7 response across Sydney metro · Licensed Level 2 ASP
Heat buildup in ceiling cavities, incompatible LED retrofits in halogen fittings, and failing drivers are the real causes of repeated downlight failure — not the bulbs. Overheating above insulation-covered fittings is a fire risk; call 0433 462 902 or book a diagnostic with Sydney Electrical Service.
Modern LED downlights are rated for 25,000 to 50,000 hours — a globe dying in six months means the fault is upstream of the bulb itself. In Sydney, this clusters in older homes where insulation was later added on top of fittings not rated for contact. Sydney Electrical Service is dispatched 24/7 across every metropolitan suburb.
What This Fault Means
A downlight that "keeps blowing" is failing prematurely. The cause is almost always one of the following:
- Heat damage — the lamp or driver is operating above its rated temperature, accelerating component failure
- Voltage stress — the supply or driver output exceeds the lamp's rated voltage tolerance
- Driver failure — the LED driver is dying and is over-driving the lamp
- Incompatible bulb / fitting combination — non-dimmable bulb on dimmer, wrong base, wrong voltage
- Loose loop connection — arcing in the loop disrupts current flow to the lamp
- Surge damage — repeated minor surges from network or solar events cumulatively destroy the driver
Many Sydney homes built or renovated in the 2010s installed dozens of MR16 12 V halogen downlights — fittings designed to dump heat upward into a ventilated ceiling cavity. Over the past decade those have been retrofitted with LED replacements that don't dump as much heat — but the original ceiling insulation strategy assumed the heat output. Worse, in homes where insulation was laid on top of the fittings without the right downlight covers, the lamps now run far hotter than they should.
---
Common Causes
- Insulation laid directly on top of fittings not rated as IC (Insulation Contact) — heat trap
- Failing LED driver delivering inconsistent or excessive output to the lamp
- Cheap, unbranded LED lamps sold to retrofit older 12 V halogen fittings
- Voltage transients from solar inverters cycling, network switching, or local AC compressors
- Mismatch between dimmer and bulb — non-dimmable bulb on phase-cut dimmer
- A loose loop connection in the ceiling rose feeding the downlight chain
- Repeated minor surges from coastal Sydney storms damaging driver electronics
- A failing 12 V transformer in legacy halogen installs, over-voltaging LED retrofits
- Fittings installed close to roof timbers without required clearance, retaining heat
- Dust accumulation reducing convective cooling around the driver
- Original installation with cheap, undersized cable causing voltage drop and driver stress
- Ceiling cavity ventilation reduced by retrofit second-storey additions
Is It Dangerous?
Generally no — a blown downlight is rarely the start of a fire. But heat-trapped fittings absolutely can be. Treat the following as urgent:
Red flags — call immediately if you see any of these:
- A burning, plastic, or fishy smell from any downlight
- Soot, char, or browning around a downlight rim
- A downlight rim that is hot to touch
- A ceiling area around a downlight that is warm or discoloured
- Crackling or buzzing from any fitting
- Flickering before the failure
- A downlight that produced smoke when it died
- Visible insulation on top of fittings (check from the roof space if accessible)
What to Do Right Now
- Note the pattern. Which downlights blow, how often, and how long they last.
- Check whether the bulbs are matched to the fitting type and the dimmer (if any).
- Switch off the dimmer for the affected circuit and use lamps at full brightness.
- Check the ceiling cavity if accessible — confirm whether insulation is in contact with the fittings.
- Note any smells, browning, or discolouration around fittings.
- Replace failed lamps with the same-spec replacement — note brand, voltage, wattage, and dimmer compatibility.
- For repeat failures of the same fitting, the driver or wiring is at fault — book a diagnostic.
- Photograph any damaged or discoloured fittings for our dispatch.
When You Must Call a Licensed Electrician
Call Sydney Electrical Service on 0433 462 902 if:
- The same downlight has failed more than twice in a year
- Multiple downlights have failed within months of each other
- A burning smell or hot rim is present
- Insulation has been laid on top of fittings not rated for it
- The home is being prepared for sale or rental (compliance issue)
- A retrofit was performed and downlights have been failing since
- Lights flicker before failure
- A surge or storm preceded the failures
We provide downlight audits across Sydney homes — identifying compliance issues, heat-trap installations, driver end-of-life, and retrofit mismatches.
---
Why DIY Is Dangerous and Illegal in NSW
Replacing a downlight bulb is homeowner work. Replacing the fitting, transformer, or driver is licensed electrical work under NSW's *Home Building Act 1989* and *Gas and Electricity (Consumer Safety) Act 2017*. Common DIY pitfalls we see:
- Halogen-to-LED retrofit without checking transformer compatibility — leads to repeat failures
- Insulation pushed back over fittings after roof access without a proper IC-rated cover
- Mismatched dimmer / bulb combinations
- Wrong voltage selection (12 V vs 240 V)
- Damaged ceiling cavity wiring during DIY downlight installation
Beyond legal exposure, downlight installation in ceiling cavities involves working close to insulation, timber framing, and live wiring. Several Sydney house fires have been traced to retrofit downlight installations that failed AS/NZS 3000 thermal clearances. Insurance routinely excludes claims involving unlicensed downlight work.
---
How to Safely Investigate This Fault
- Note which downlights fail and how often.Note which downlights fail and how often.
- Check bulb compatibility with fitting and dimmer.Check bulb compatibility with fitting and dimmer.
- Bypass the dimmer for the affected circuit.Bypass the dimmer for the affected circuit.
- Check the ceiling cavity for insulation contact with fittings.Check the ceiling cavity for insulation contact with fittings.
- Smell-check fittings during operation for any burning odour.Smell-check fittings during operation for any burning odour.
- Touch-test rims for excessive heat (allow cooling first).Touch-test rims for excessive heat (allow cooling first).
- Photograph any discoloured or damaged fittings.Photograph any discoloured or damaged fittings.
- Call 0433 462 902 for a downlight audit.Call 0433 462 902 for a downlight audit.
Frequently Asked Questions
My downlights last only a few months — is the brand bad?
Can insulation really kill downlights?
Why does the same fitting blow but the others don't?
Are LED downlights better than halogen?
Can a dimmer cause downlights to blow?
Do I need to replace all downlights at once?
Should I upgrade my downlights when renovating?
How quickly can you respond?
Will my house catch fire if downlights are covered by insulation?
Can I fix this myself by swapping in a better globe?
What's the difference between IC-rated and non-IC-rated downlights?
How much does it cost to fix downlights that keep blowing?
Should I worry if my downlights flicker before they blow?
24/7 Emergency Response Across Sydney