Blown Fuse in Reedy Creek
Blown a fuse in your Reedy Creek home? It is often a minor, everyday event, but Family Electrician Reedy Creek checks it properly, explains what happened in plain language, and leaves it safe, backed by 300+ five-star reviews.
What a Blown Fuse Actually Means
A blown fuse means a circuit drew more current than it was designed to carry, and the fuse did its job by cutting the power before wiring or an appliance overheated. It is a protective device working correctly, and under AS/NZS 3000 that protection matters. The team at Family Electrician Reedy Creek sees this one all the time, and the fix is usually straightforward.

Common Causes of a Blown Fuse
An ageing rewireable fuse board
Many homes built here through the 1980s and 90s, as the estate grew and later expanded with developments like The Observatory, still run original rewireable or ceramic fuse boards that were never upgraded to modern safety switches.
Modern appliances overloading old circuits
Induction cooktops, split-system cooling and pool equipment draw far more than a fuse sized decades ago was ever built for, so an old fuse blows under everyday demand rather than a genuine fault.
A faulty appliance
An appliance with an internal fault will draw excess current the moment it is switched on, blowing the same fuse repeatedly until the faulty item is identified and isolated.
A short circuit
A damaged cord, a fault inside an appliance, or a wiring fault can cause a sudden surge of current that blows the fuse almost instantly, often with a small pop at the point.
Storm-season power surges
Sudden subtropical storms across the hinterland can send a surge through the network via Energex, which is often enough to blow a fuse on an already stretched circuit.
Is a Blown Fuse Dangerous?
A single blown fuse is usually a nuisance, not an emergency, but a fuse that keeps blowing or a board with no safety switches is a genuine warning sign worth taking seriously.
- A fuse blowing once and staying off is generally the system protecting you as designed
- A fuse that blows again soon after replacement points to a fault that will not fix itself
- Warmth, buzzing or any smell at the fuse board should be checked the same day
- An old board with no safety switches offers little protection against electric shock under AS/NZS 3000
Call now to book your electrician today on (07) 5500 2878.

What To Do Right Now
If a fuse has blown, a few simple and safe steps protect your household and the circuit until a licensed electrician can take a proper look at what happened:
- Switch off the main switch or the affected circuit at the switchboard.
- Unplug the appliance that was running when the fuse blew and leave it unplugged.
- Do not keep replacing or resetting a fuse that blows again straight away.
- Do not open the fuse board, remove covers, or touch the wiring yourself.
- Call a licensed electrician (Lic #83326) to check the circuit properly.

When To Call an Electrician for a Blown Fuse
- The same fuse blows again soon after it is replaced
- More than one circuit is affected, or the whole board feels unreliable
- There is any warmth, buzzing or burning smell at the board
- Your switchboard still uses old ceramic or rewireable fuses
- The blown fuse followed a storm, power surge or heavy rain
Any of these at your property is a job for a licensed electrician, not another fuse. We respond same-day where availability allows, with clear pricing before we start, and can advise on switchboard upgrades or electrical repairs.

How it works
How We Fix a Blown Fuse in Reedy Creek
Fault Finding
We isolate circuits methodically to trace exactly why the fuse blew, checking connected appliances, wiring and the board itself before deciding on the right fix.
Upfront Quote
Once we understand the cause, we explain it in plain language and give you clear pricing before we start, so there are no surprises once work begins.
The Repair or Upgrade
We resolve the immediate fault, and where an old fuse board is the real issue, we recommend a switchboard upgrade with modern circuit breakers and safety switches fitted.
Testing & Safety Check
Every circuit is tested and the board checked against AS/NZS 3000 before we leave, so the fix holds and your home stays genuinely safe and sorted.
Why This Is Common in Reedy Creek Homes
Many estate homes built here since the 1980s still run their original fuse boards, and modern loads like split-system cooling and EV chargers are often what finally pushes an old board past its limit, much like nearby Mudgeeraba.

Blown Fuses and Related Electrical Faults Across Reedy Creek
A blown fuse often shows up alongside a tripped circuit breaker or overloaded power points. We fix all three across the estate, Varsity Lakes, Burleigh Waters and Robina.

Fuse Keeps Blowing in Reedy Creek? Book an Electrician Today
Call (07) 5500 2878 for same-day and emergency service, clear pricing before we start, and 300+ five-star reviews behind us. We will find the fault and leave it safe and sorted. Get in touch.
Common questions
Blown Fuse FAQs
Here are the questions we hear most from homeowners dealing with a blown fuse, along with straight answers before you pick up the phone.
Is a blown fuse dangerous?
Usually not. A fuse blowing once is often just doing its job, but one that blows repeatedly points to a real fault that should be checked properly.
What causes a fuse to blow?
Overload, a short circuit, a faulty appliance, or an ageing rewireable fuse board without modern safety switches are the most common causes we find on site.
What should I do if a fuse blows?
Switch off the main switch, unplug whatever was running on that circuit, and avoid repeatedly resetting it before calling a licensed electrician to check it properly.
Do I need an electrician for a blown fuse, or can I fix it myself?
Fuses and old fuse boards should only be handled by a licensed electrician, since diagnosing the underlying fault safely requires proper testing equipment and training.
How much does it cost to fix a blown fuse or upgrade a fuse board?
It depends on the cause and the board itself, so we assess it onsite and give you clear pricing before we start, with no surprises once work begins.
Are old fuse boards still common in Reedy Creek homes?
Some of the estate's earliest 1980s and 90s boards were never upgraded and still run older-style fuses, which we typically replace with a modern switchboard.