Flickering or dimming lights are easy to ignore, but they sit on a wide spectrum. On one end is a loose bulb you can fix in ten seconds. On the other is a failing connection that can damage your electronics or start a fire. The single most useful question to ask is this: is it one light, or is it the whole house?
Usually harmless causes
If the flickering is limited to a single fixture or lamp, the cause is almost always local and minor:
- An LED bulb paired with an old dimmer that was made for incandescent bulbs, a very common mismatch
- A bulb that is slightly loose in its socket
- One aging bulb, socket, or switch that needs replacing
- Older fluorescent tubes that flicker while they warm up
Tighten or swap the bulb, and if you dim that light, confirm you are using a dimmable LED on an LED-compatible dimmer. This solves a large share of single-fixture flickering with no electrician required.
Signs it is something serious
When the flicker is widespread or comes with other symptoms, treat it as a warning:
- Lights flicker throughout the house, in multiple rooms at once
- Lights dim noticeably when a large appliance starts, such as the AC, dryer, or oven, and it seems to be getting worse
- Flickering paired with buzzing, warmth at a switch or outlet, or any burning smell
- Lights that brighten and dim on their own, or brighten in one part of the house while dimming in another
Whole-home flickering, especially with lights brightening in some areas while dimming in others, can signal a compromised neutral connection at the panel or the utility service. A bad neutral lets voltage swing out of range, which can destroy electronics and create a serious fire risk. This is not a wait-and-see issue. Call promptly.
What is actually happening
Lights flicker when the voltage feeding them fluctuates. A minor, momentary dip when a big motor kicks on can be normal. Persistent or worsening fluctuation is not. Loose connections generate heat every time current passes through them, and heat is what turns a small wiring fault into a fire. Problems at the main service or neutral affect the whole home at once, which is why house-wide symptoms deserve fast attention.
When to call us
Call if the flickering is house-wide, if lights dim more and more when appliances start, or if you notice any heat, buzzing, or smell. We check the connections at outlets and switches, inspect the panel and service, and tighten or repair what we find. If the fault is on the utility side of the meter, we will identify that and help you coordinate with Oncor.
Common questions
Are flickering lights dangerous?
Sometimes. A single flickering bulb is usually harmless. House-wide flickering, or flickering combined with heat, buzzing, or a burning smell, can indicate loose wiring or a failing neutral, which is a fire risk and should be checked promptly.
Why do my lights dim when the AC or dryer turns on?
A brief, slight dip when a large motor starts can be normal. A noticeable or worsening dim suggests an overloaded circuit, an undersized service, or a loose connection that is worth having checked before it gets worse.
Can an LED dimmer cause flickering?
Yes, this is one of the most common causes. Pairing LED bulbs with a dimmer designed for incandescent bulbs often causes flicker. Use dimmable LED bulbs on an LED-compatible dimmer and the problem usually disappears.
It is always free to ask. Call or text Stormy Electric at (214) 756-7246 and we will point you in the right direction, even if it turns out you do not need us.