If the lights in your house are flickering, you are not alone. It is one of the most frequent calls we receive from Indianapolis homeowners at Zimmerman Electric. Sometimes the fix is as simple as tightening a loose bulb. Other times, flickering lights are the early warning signal of a serious electrical hazard hiding inside your walls.
The challenge is knowing the difference. That is exactly what this guide is for. We will walk you through the seven most common causes of flickering lights, explain which scenarios are dangerous, and tell you clearly when to put the phone down and call a licensed electrician right away. For the full range of residential electrical services we offer in Central Indiana, visit our Residential Electrical Services page.
Understanding what is actually behind the flicker is the first step toward fixing it. Below are the seven causes we diagnose most often in Indianapolis and Central Indiana homes, ranked from simplest to most serious.
This is the simplest and most frequent cause of a single light flickering. When a bulb is not fully seated in its socket, the electrical connection becomes intermittent, causing the light to flicker. This is especially common with LED and CFL bulbs, which do not always screw into older socket designs as firmly as incandescent bulbs did.
What to do: Turn off the light, let the bulb cool, and make sure it is screwed in firmly. If the flickering continues, try replacing the bulb entirely. LED bulbs that are incompatible with older dimmer switches will also flicker at low settings.
If you notice flickering only when a specific switch is in use, or if the light stutters when you gently tap or wiggle the switch plate, the switch itself is likely the culprit. Light switches contain small internal contacts that wear out over time. A switch that crackles, feels warm to the touch, or flickers erratically should be replaced promptly.
A faulty switch is a relatively inexpensive repair, but it should be handled by a licensed electrician. Attempting to replace switches without proper knowledge of your home's wiring can create more serious issues.
Loose wiring is one of the more serious causes of flickering lights, and also one of the most common in older Indianapolis homes. Over time, wire connections at outlets, junction boxes, and fixtures can loosen due to thermal expansion, vibration, or age. A loose connection creates arcing, which is when electricity jumps across a small gap, generating heat and a fire risk.
This cause demands professional attention. The National Electrical Code (NEC) classifies loose wiring as an arc fault hazard. Our team at Zimmerman Electric uses diagnostic tools to locate loose connections safely, especially in Indianapolis homes built before 1990 where wiring infrastructure is aging.
When too many devices draw power from the same circuit simultaneously, the circuit becomes overloaded. This causes a voltage drop that you experience as a dimming or flickering of lights sharing that circuit. Homeowners often notice this when running a microwave, hair dryer, or space heater on the same circuit as their kitchen or bathroom lights.
An occasional voltage dip from a high-draw appliance starting up is not unusual. But if you notice regular dimming or flickering whenever multiple appliances run at once, your home may need additional dedicated circuits or a panel upgrade to meet your household's current demand.
Large motor-driven appliances, including HVAC systems, refrigerators, washing machines, and well pumps, draw a significant surge of power when they start up. This momentary draw can cause a brief voltage dip that makes nearby lights flicker or dim for a second or two before stabilizing. A single brief flicker when the HVAC kicks on is generally considered normal.
However, if the flickering lasts longer than a few seconds, or if it is happening across multiple rooms simultaneously, the voltage fluctuation has moved beyond normal startup behavior. Severe or prolonged voltage fluctuations can also damage sensitive electronics throughout your home. This is one of the key scenarios where a
whole-house surge protection system becomes a smart investment. Learn more on our Whole-House Surge Protector page.
Older electrical panels, particularly those rated at 60 or 100 amps in homes that now run significantly more electrical load, are a leading cause of persistent flickering across multiple rooms or circuits. When a panel's capacity is routinely stressed near its limit, voltage regulation suffers, and flickering becomes a symptom.
Homes in Indianapolis built before 1980, especially those with Federal Pacific Stab-Lok or Zinsco panels, face a compounding problem: these specific panel brands have documented safety records that make them a fire risk. If your home has one of these panels and you are experiencing flickering, that is a situation that warrants an urgent inspection. Our team handles electrical panel upgrades throughout Central Indiana, including full 200-amp service upgrades.
Sometimes the flickering is not inside your home at all. Utility-side problems, such as a damaged or corroded utility connection at the weatherhead, a failing transformer on your street, or an issue with the neutral wire on your utility feed, can cause flickering that affects your entire home or one half of it at a time.
If you notice flickering in every room simultaneously, or if your neighbors report the same issue at the same time, contact your utility provider (AES Indiana or Duke Energy Indiana for most Central Indiana homes) to report the issue. That said, if a utility inspection reveals no problem on their end, the issue is almost certainly inside your home's electrical system.
This is one of the most common questions we hear in Indianapolis, especially during peak cooling season in May through September. The short answer is: a brief, momentary flicker when your air conditioner starts up is normal. Here is the longer explanation.
Central air conditioning units, heat pumps, and whole-home HVAC systems contain large compressor motors. Starting a compressor motor requires a significant surge of electricity, sometimes three to five times the unit's normal running current, in the fraction of a second it takes to get the motor spinning. That startup surge causes a temporary voltage dip in your electrical system, which your lights register as a brief flicker or dimming.
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When AC Flickering Becomes a Warning Sign The flicker is normal if it lasts one to two seconds and only occurs when the unit starts. Call a licensed electrician if:
Worsening AC-related flickering often points to a panel that is no longer keeping up with your home's electrical demand. A 100-amp service panel in a home running a modern HVAC system, multiple appliances, and EV charging may be running near its capacity limit. |
The majority of single-bulb or localized flickering cases are minor. But there are specific scenarios where flickering lights are a direct indicator of an electrical hazard. Here are the warning signs that mean you should stop what you are doing and call a licensed electrician immediately.
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Warning Sign |
What It Indicates |
Urgency Level |
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Flickering across multiple rooms or entire house |
Utility connection issue or failing main panel |
Call same day |
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Flickering with a burning smell |
Arc fault or overheating wiring |
Call immediately |
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Flickering with buzzing or crackling sound from a switch or panel |
Arcing at a connection or breaker |
Call immediately |
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Lights dim significantly when an appliance starts |
Undersized panel or overloaded circuit |
Schedule soon |
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Flickering after a recent storm |
Damaged utility connection or weatherhead damage |
Call today |
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Flickering that has worsened over weeks or months |
Progressive wiring degradation or panel failure |
Schedule this week |
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Breaker trips alongside or after flickering |
Short circuit or overloaded circuit |
Call today |
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Safety Note from Zimmerman Electric: Arcing electricity inside walls and junction boxes is responsible for approximately 35,000 home fires per year in the United States according to the NFPA. Flickering lights accompanied by a burning smell or unexplained heat from outlets or switch plates is an emergency. Do not wait. Call us at 317-548-0082. |
Both loose wiring and a failing circuit breaker can cause flickering, but they typically behave differently and require different fixes. Here is how to distinguish between the two.
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Cause |
How It Typically Presents |
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Loose wiring at a fixture or outlet |
Flickering that comes and goes from one specific light or outlet; often worse in older parts of the home or after recent electrical work |
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Loose wiring at the panel |
Flickering that affects an entire circuit or multiple rooms; may be accompanied by a warm or discolored breaker |
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Bad circuit breaker |
Flickering combined with the breaker tripping; the breaker may also feel warm, look discolored, or refuse to stay reset |
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Neutral wire issue at the panel |
One half of the home flickers or dims while the other half brightens; classic sign of a failing neutral connection |
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Utility connection problem |
Flickering that affects the entire home simultaneously; neighbors may report similar symptoms |
In most cases, distinguishing the exact source of a wiring problem requires a licensed electrician with proper diagnostic tools. Multimeter testing at outlets, thermal imaging at the panel, and load testing are standard diagnostic steps our technicians use during a residential electrical inspection.
We always encourage Indianapolis homeowners to start with the basics before calling us. There are a handful of simple checks that are completely safe for a homeowner to perform without any electrical knowledge. Beyond those, the work belongs with a licensed electrician.
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Safe DIY Checks for Homeowners
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Stop Here and Call a Licensed Electrician If:
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Indiana law is clear: homeowners may replace a bulb or a light switch on a fixture they own. Any work involving wiring connections, circuit breakers, panel components, or new circuits requires a licensed electrician and an electrical permit in most jurisdictions. Unlicensed electrical work also voids homeowners insurance coverage for electrical fires.
When you call us about flickering lights, we do not guess. Our licensed electricians follow a structured diagnostic process to identify the exact source of the problem before recommending any work. Here is what that process looks like.
Zimmerman Electric is a BBB-accredited, family-owned electrical contractor serving Marion, Hamilton, Hendricks, Johnson, Hancock, Boone, Shelby, and Morgan Counties. We are available for residential inspections, panel upgrades, circuit repairs, and EV charger installations throughout Central Indiana. For EV charger installation alongside a panel upgrade, see our EV Charger Installation service page. All work is performed by licensed, insured electricians, and we pull all required permits.
One concept that helps homeowners make sense of flickering is the idea of normal operating voltage. In a healthy residential electrical system, standard household voltage runs consistently between 115 and 125 volts AC. When you see lights dim or flicker, it means the voltage at that point in the circuit has dropped temporarily or is fluctuating erratically.
Normal voltage dips are small, around 3 to 5 volts, and happen for a fraction of a second when a large motor appliance starts. Your eyes may barely register it, or you might see a very slight, quick dim. Anything more dramatic than that, or any fluctuation that continues for several seconds or longer, falls outside normal parameters.
Chronic voltage fluctuations are particularly hard on your home's electronics and appliances. Televisions, computers, smart home hubs, and HVAC control boards are all vulnerable to damage from unstable voltage. A whole-house surge protector installed at the panel does not just protect against lightning strikes. It also smooths out internal voltage spikes caused by motor appliances cycling on and off throughout the day.
Our whole-house surge protection solutions at Zimmerman Electric are a cost-effective layer of protection for any Indianapolis home, and are particularly valuable in neighborhoods served by overhead utility lines that are susceptible to storm-related surges during Indiana's severe weather season.
We work in homes across Marion, Hamilton, Hendricks, Johnson, Boone, Shelby, Hancock, and Morgan Counties every single day. Central Indiana's housing stock has some very specific characteristics that make flickering lights a more common problem here than in newer residential markets.
If your home falls into any of these categories, a proactive electrical inspection is one of the most valuable things you can do. Our team provides comprehensive residential electrical assessments throughout Central Indiana. Explore our full residential electrical services here.