Why Does My Safety Switch Keep Tripping?
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24/7 response across Sydney metro · Licensed Level 2 ASP
Safety switches trip when earth leakage reaches 30 mA, most often from a faulty appliance, wet cable insulation, or water ingress into outdoor or shower circuits.
If the switch won't stay on or trips again immediately, the fault is active and potentially dangerous — call 0433 462 902 or book a diagnostic with Sydney Electrical Service. In Sydney, the typical culprits are leaking shower wiring in 1970s strata blocks, storm-affected garden lighting, beachside outdoor kitchens in Cronulla and Coogee — and occasionally a brand-new budget appliance from a discount store. Sydney Electrical Service operates 24/7 across every metropolitan suburb.
What This Fault Means
A safety switch — formally a Residual Current Device (RCD) — measures the current flowing into a circuit on the active conductor and out via the neutral. Under normal conditions those two values are identical. If even 30 milliamps of current goes missing — diverted to earth through a faulty appliance, damp wiring, or a human body — the device disconnects power within 30 milliseconds.
That speed is the difference between a startle and a fatality. AS/NZS 3000 requires RCD protection on all power and lighting circuits in new and significantly altered installations, and the *Service and Installation Rules of NSW* require an RCD on every final subcircuit in a domestic switchboard upgrade.
When your safety switch trips and refuses to reset, it has detected a real, ongoing leakage path. The job is to find it.
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Common Causes
- A faulty appliance with degraded insulation — washing machines, dishwashers, kettles, irons, hair dryers, electric blankets
- Water ingress into an outdoor power point, garden lighting transformer, or pool/spa equipment
- Moisture in light fittings after a leaking roof, common in older Inner West terraces and post-storm North Shore homes
- Damaged or perished cabling in roof spaces — UV degradation, rodent damage, or pinched cable
- Old fluorescent ballasts and starters reaching end of life
- LED downlight drivers failing — particularly cheap non-compliant imports
- Leaking shower or bath wiring where waterproofing has failed in older bathrooms
- A "nuisance" trip from cumulative low-level leakage across many appliances on the same RCD-protected circuit
- Lightning-induced surges damaging surge protection or appliance MOVs after Sydney storms
- Solar PV inverter earth-leakage through DC isolators (especially older models)
- A faulty RCD itself — the device is mechanical and does fail
Is It Dangerous?
Yes — every nuisance trip should be treated as real until proven otherwise. The danger isn't the safety switch tripping; the danger is the leakage path that caused it. Watch for these red flags:
Red flags — call immediately if you see any of these:
- A tingle, buzz, or shock when you touch a tap, appliance, or shower fitting
- A burning or fishy plastic smell at any power point or light fitting
- Discoloration or blackening around outlets
- Visible water dripping from a light fitting or outlet
- The RCD trips at the same time every day (often pointing to a timer-controlled circuit, hot water, or pool pump)
- Test button on the RCD does not trip the device when pressed — the RCD itself has failed
What to Do Right Now
- Open your switchboard and identify the tripped RCD — it will sit between OFF and ON.
- Switch every individual circuit breaker downstream of the RCD to OFF. This isolates the circuits one at a time.
- Reset the RCD to ON.
- Switch breakers back on one at a time. When the RCD trips, you have your faulty circuit.
- Unplug every appliance on that circuit and reset again.
- If the RCD now holds, reintroduce appliances one by one. The one that trips it is your fault.
- If the RCD still won't hold with everything unplugged, the fault is in the fixed wiring or in a hard-wired appliance (oven, hot water, pool pump, lighting).
- Press the test button on the RCD. If it doesn't trip, the device is faulty and needs replacement immediately.
When You Must Call a Licensed Electrician
Stop and call Sydney Electrical Service on 0433 462 902 if any of the following apply:
- The RCD won't hold with all breakers and appliances disconnected
- The trip happens during or after a storm
- You can smell burning, see water, or feel heat anywhere on the circuit
- A tingle is felt from any tap, appliance, or fixture
- The RCD test button does not trip the device
- The trip occurs on circuits you cannot easily isolate (oven, hot water, hardwired air conditioner)
- You live in a strata building and other units are affected
- The home has no RCD protection at all and you are still using ceramic fuses
We are licensed Level 2 ASP contractors, which means we are accredited to work on the consumer mains, switchboard, and metering — work most general electricians cannot legally undertake. If your home requires service-fuse work, isolation, or a switchboard upgrade, we can do it without a separate Ausgrid attendance.
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Why DIY Is Dangerous and Illegal in NSW
The whole reason a safety switch exists is that mains voltage will kill you in less than half a second. The work required to find and fix an earth fault — isolating circuits, insulation-resistance testing with a megohmmeter, polarity testing, and verifying earth continuity — requires a licensed electrician with the right test equipment.
Under NSW law, only a licensed electrical contractor may carry out fixed wiring work, and only an accredited Level 2 ASP may work on the supply side. A homeowner who attempts to swap an RCD, re-terminate a circuit, or "test" by bridging out the safety switch is committing an offence under the *Gas and Electricity (Consumer Safety) Act 2017* and exposing themselves to criminal liability if a fire or fatality follows. Home and contents insurers in NSW routinely deny claims where unlicensed electrical work is found.
The cost of a professional callout is always less than the cost of a fire, a hospital admission, or a denied insurance claim.
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How to Safely Investigate This Fault
- Open the switchboard cover and identify which RCD has tripped.Open the switchboard cover and identify which RCD has tripped.
- Turn every breaker downstream of that RCD to OFF.Turn every breaker downstream of that RCD to OFF.
- Reset the RCD by switching it firmly OFF, then ON.Reset the RCD by switching it firmly OFF, then ON.
- Switch each breaker back on, one at a time. Wait 30 seconds between each.Switch each breaker back on, one at a time. Wait 30 seconds between each.
- The breaker that causes the RCD to trip is on the faulty circuit. Note its lThe breaker that causes the RCD to trip is on the faulty circuit. Note its label.
- Unplug everything on that circuit and try again.Unplug everything on that circuit and try again.
- If the RCD now holds, plug appliances back in one at a time. The trip-causinIf the RCD now holds, plug appliances back in one at a time. The trip-causing appliance is your culprit.
- If it still won't hold, leave it OFF and call 0433 462 902. The fault is in If it still won't hold, leave it OFF and call 0433 462 902. The fault is in the fixed wiring.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between a safety switch and a circuit breaker?
Why does my safety switch trip in the middle of the night when nobody is using anything?
How often should I press the test button?
Can a faulty kettle really trip a safety switch?
Why does my safety switch trip when it rains?
My RCD tripped once and reset cleanly — should I worry?
Do strata apartments need safety switches?
How quickly can you get to my Sydney suburb?
Is it safe to reset my safety switch myself?
Can I unplug appliances one by one to find what's tripping my safety switch?
How much does it cost to fix a tripping safety switch in Sydney?
Will my house catch fire if the safety switch keeps tripping and I just keep resetting it?
Is it safe to leave a circuit switched off at the safety switch while I wait for an electrician?
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