The Short Answer
Yes, but only up to a point. A GFCI outlet trips when it detects a ground fault, but it cannot protect against overloads or short circuits the way a breaker does. If a GFCI trips repeatedly for no obvious reason, the outlet itself may be failing, or something on the circuit is drawing too much current.
What a GFCI Outlet Actually Does (and Doesn’t Do)

A lot of homeowners treat a tripping GFCI outlet like a nuisance to reset rather than a signal worth investigating. That instinct can get expensive.
The job of a GFCI is narrow but critical
A ground fault circuit interrupter monitors the difference in current flowing out through the hot wire versus returning through the neutral. If that difference hits about 5 milliamps, the outlet shuts off in roughly 1/40th of a second. That speed is what prevents electrocution near water. What it does not do is measure total load. Plugging a 15-amp shop vac into a 15-amp circuit won’t cause the GFCI to trip on its own — that’s the breaker’s job.
Common reasons a GFCI keeps tripping
There are four situations that come up regularly in older homes around Palos Hills:
- Moisture inside the outlet box — especially common in bathrooms, garages, and unfinished basements where humidity creeps into wall cavities.
- A worn-out GFCI device — they have a lifespan of roughly 10 years. After that, the internal test mechanism can become hypersensitive or fail entirely.
- Appliances with leakage current — older refrigerators, some power tools, and certain hair dryers bleed a small amount of current to ground by design. That trickle can be enough to trip a sensitive GFCI.
- Wiring issues upstream — a loose neutral connection anywhere on the circuit can create a phantom ground fault that trips the outlet intermittently.
When resetting it just doesn’t work
If you press the reset button and it immediately pops back out, or if the outlet shows power on a voltage tester even after tripping, the device has almost certainly failed internally. That’s a replacement job. A licensed electrician can swap the outlet, confirm the downstream wiring is intact, and test the circuit properly. Residents in the area shouldn’t keep resetting a GFCI that won’t hold — an outlet that won’t latch after reset may not be protecting anything at all, which defeats the entire purpose.
Knowing When to Call a Pro vs. Handle It Yourself
Replacing a GFCI outlet is one of the more approachable DIY electrical tasks for someone comfortable working with wiring. But there’s a difference between swapping out a bad device and diagnosing why one keeps tripping in the first place.
DIY is reasonable when…
The outlet is more than 10 years old, it trips randomly with nothing plugged in, and there’s no visible moisture or damage. In that case, buying a new GFCI outlet at a hardware store and swapping it out is a straightforward fix. Just make sure to turn off the breaker first and match the amperage rating exactly.
Call an electrician when…
The new outlet still trips after replacement. That tells you the problem isn’t the device — it’s something on the circuit. Intermittent trips tied to a specific appliance might mean that appliance needs service, but recurring trips with nothing plugged in often point to wiring faults, moisture intrusion in conduit, or a failing breaker feeding the circuit. These aren’t DIY fixes. If you’re also seeing issues with outlets elsewhere in the home, it may be time for a broader look — an electrical inspection can catch problems that individual outlet swaps won’t surface.
For homes with older wiring, a wiring upgrade is sometimes the right long-term answer, especially if multiple outlets are showing problems across the house.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission’s electrical safety resources are worth reviewing if you want a deeper look at what GFCI protection requirements apply to different areas of the home. And if you’re curious about the specific electrical codes that govern outlet placement and protection requirements in Illinois, the City of Palos Hills can point you toward local permit and inspection contacts.
Related Questions

How do I know if a GFCI outlet is actually working or just looks like it is?
Press the “Test” button — the outlet should lose power immediately. Then press “Reset” and power should return. If pressing Test does nothing, or if the outlet never had power to begin with even though the breaker is on, the device has failed and needs to be replaced. A simple outlet tester (available at any hardware store for a few dollars) will confirm live power and tell you if the wiring connections are correct.
Can a GFCI outlet go bad without tripping at all?
Yes, and this is actually the more dangerous failure mode. A GFCI can reach a state where it no longer monitors current but still passes power through normally. The outlet appears to work fine, but it offers zero protection. This is why the National Electrical Code and most electricians recommend testing GFCI outlets monthly and replacing them after about a decade of use, regardless of whether they’ve caused any trouble.