Electrical Safety at Home When You Live Alone

Electrical faults cause thousands of house fires each year. When you live alone, identifying hazards before they become emergencies is your best protection.

Electrical fires account for approximately 51,000 home fires annually in the US, causing nearly 500 deaths — most caused by faulty appliances, wiring, or overloaded sockets.

The Challenge

Overloaded extension leads and damaged appliance cables are easy to overlook when living alone with no one to flag a concern.

DIY electrical work without proper qualifications is a leading cause of house fires and electrocution.

An electrical fire starting at night when you are asleep and alone can spread rapidly before you wake.

How I'm Alive Helps

Use one plug per socket where possible and never daisy-chain extension leads. Replace damaged cables immediately.

Have a qualified electrician check your wiring every 10 years, or when moving into an older property.

Ensure smoke alarms are working and use I'm Alive so contacts are alerted if an electrical emergency affects you.

Identifying and Addressing Electrical Hazards

Check appliance cables regularly for fraying, cracking, or damage near the plug. A damaged cable is a fire and shock hazard — repair or replace immediately, never cover with tape. Do not overload sockets with multi-adaptors. Each socket has a maximum current rating. Exceeding it causes heat build-up, which can cause fires. Use a single extension lead with a surge protector if you need extra sockets. Unplug appliances at the wall when not in use and before going to bed — especially phone chargers left in walls overnight, which continue to draw current even without a device attached.

Safe Practices and Emergency Response

Never use appliances near water, attempt DIY repairs on electrical equipment, or bypass a fuse. If a fuse blows repeatedly, this signals a fault that needs a qualified electrician, not a higher-rated fuse. If you experience an electric shock, no matter how minor, report it to a qualified electrician and have the appliance and circuit checked before using them again. Fit an RCD (residual current device) on your consumer unit or use a portable RCD adaptor — these cut power within milliseconds if a fault is detected, potentially preventing electrocution. I'm Alive check-ins ensure your contacts are alerted if an electrical emergency leaves you unable to respond.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my home wiring is safe?

Have a qualified electrician conduct an Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR). This is recommended every 10 years for owner-occupiers and every 5 years for rented properties.

Is it safe to charge my phone overnight?

Use the original charger and cable, charge on a hard surface (not under pillows or on fabric), and do not leave it charging unattended for extended periods while you sleep.

What should I do if I see sparks from a plug socket?

Switch off at the socket and unplug carefully. Do not use the socket until a qualified electrician has inspected it. Sparks indicate a fault that can cause fire or shock.

Can old wiring cause fires even if appliances are fine?

Yes. Old wiring (especially pre-1960s rubber-insulated wiring) degrades over time and can cause arcing and fires independently of appliance condition. Regular inspections are essential.

How does I'm Alive help in an electrical emergency?

If an electrical fire or shock leaves you unable to respond to your scheduled check-in, your trusted contacts are automatically notified and can call emergency services.

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