If you've ever wondered whether whole home surge protection is worth the investment, you're not alone.
Many homeowners picture a power surge as a dramatic lightning strike that instantly destroys a television or appliance. While that can happen, the truth is that the most common surge damage is often much less obvious.
In many homes, small power surges happen every day.
Your air conditioner starts. Your refrigerator cycles on. Utility power fluctuates. A storm passes nearby. Most of these events don't cause immediate damage, but over time they can wear down the sensitive electronics inside your appliances and devices.
Think of it like repeatedly bending a paperclip. One bend doesn't break it. Hundreds eventually do.
Modern homes contain far more electronics than they did even 10 years ago.
Many appliances now contain circuit boards and sensitive components that can be damaged by voltage fluctuations.
Some common examples include:
When these components fail, homeowners are often surprised by the repair costs.
While not every failure is caused by a power surge, repeated surge exposure can shorten the lifespan of many electronic components throughout your home.
A whole home surge protector is installed at your electrical panel.
Its job is to intercept and divert damaging voltage spikes before they can travel throughout your home's electrical system.
Think of it as the first line of defense for the electronics connected to your home's wiring.
When a surge enters through the electrical service, the surge protector helps absorb and redirect that excess energy before it reaches your appliances and devices.
Most damage isn't caused by one major lightning strike.
Small surges happen every day when:
Many homeowners never know a surge occurred.
They only know that a refrigerator control board failed, an HVAC circuit board stopped working, or a television suddenly won't turn on.
In some cases, surge protection may help prevent those failures before they happen.
Not always.
This is something many electricians don't explain.
A whole home surge protector helps protect your home from surges entering through the electrical system, but electronics can also be exposed through other pathways.
For example:
That's why we often recommend using quality surge-protected power strips for sensitive electronics such as:
A whole home surge protector protects at the panel.
A surge strip provides an additional layer of protection right at the device.
The two work best together.
For many homeowners, the answer is yes.
When you compare the cost of surge protection to the cost of replacing a major appliance or electronic system, the investment is often relatively small.
A single damaged appliance can easily cost more than the protection designed to help safeguard your entire home.
If you're considering surge protection and want to know whether it's a good fit for your home, we're happy to answer your questions and explain your options.
No pressure. No sales pitch. Just honest information so you can make the decision that's right for your family.