A buzzing outlet is one of those electrical warnings you should never ignore. A healthy outlet is silent. If your electrical outlet is buzzing, humming, or crackling, current is arcing across a loose connection or a damaged component — and arcing inside a wall is how electrical fires start. Stop using the outlet and read the safe steps below.
The noise you hear is tiny electrical arcs jumping across a gap that should not exist — usually between a loose screw terminal and a wire, between a worn plug blade and the outlet contacts, or across cracked internal plastic. Every arc vaporizes a bit of metal and pits the surface, which widens the gap, which makes the arcing worse. The Electrical Safety Authority’s 2023 Ontario Electrical Safety Report shows fires from electrical distribution equipment are down 18% since 2019, in part because arc-fault breakers now catch this exact failure mode. Older Toronto homes without AFCI protection are much more vulnerable.
Do this in order. First, unplug anything connected to the outlet. Second, go to your panel and turn off the breaker that feeds that room, then confirm the outlet is dead with a lamp or tester. Third, do not remove the outlet cover to poke around — even a de-energized outlet in a shared box can be back-fed from another circuit. Fourth, call for emergency electrical service or a same-day outlet replacement. If the outlet is warm, discoloured, or smells like fish or burning plastic, treat it as a fire risk and leave the breaker off until the electrician arrives.
The three we see most in the GTA are: back-stabbed connections in outlets that were installed 20+ years ago (the wire push-in springs weaken over time), overloaded outlets where a space heater or dehumidifier has been drawing 12+ amps continuously, and worn-out receptacles where too many plugs and unplugs have loosened the internal contacts. Kitchen and bathroom outlets fail earliest because they are used most and are exposed to humidity.
One more cause worth flagging is water intrusion. Basement outlets, garage receptacles, and older exterior outlets without proper in-use covers get moisture inside, and corroded contacts arc and buzz long before they visibly fail. Any outdoor outlet that hums after a rain deserves same-day attention.
If only one outlet in a room buzzes, replace that outlet — but also inspect the outlet upstream of it on the same circuit. Loose wire nuts or back-stabbed connections often start upstream and only make noise at the downstream outlet where the load is heaviest. Fixing just the noisy one leaves the real problem in the wall.
A buzzing outlet will not fix itself — and it is one of the top causes of hidden electrical fires. Call 416-838-9006 or visit our contact page and we will be out the same day.