Electrical Safety

GFCI vs AFCI Outlets: What They Are and Where You Need Them

October 2024 · 3 min read · By Seapoint Electrical Services
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If you've ever had an electrician mention GFCI or AFCI outlets and wondered what the difference was — this post is for you. Both are safety devices required by code in modern homes, but they protect against completely different hazards. Knowing what each one does helps you understand why they matter.

What Is a GFCI Outlet?

GFCI stands for Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter. In plain terms: it watches the flow of electricity through a circuit and shuts off power in milliseconds if it detects that current is leaking somewhere unexpected — like through a person who's touching a faulty appliance near water. That fraction-of-a-second response time is what makes it life-saving. These are required anywhere water is present: bathrooms, kitchens, garages, and outdoors. You can recognize them by the "Test" and "Reset" buttons on the outlet face.

What Is an AFCI Outlet?

AFCI stands for Arc Fault Circuit Interrupter. This one guards against a different kind of danger: electrical arcing inside your walls. Arcing happens when wiring is damaged, loosely connected, or pinched — it creates tiny sparks that can ignite insulation or framing without any visible sign until there's a fire. AFCI protection is required by current electrical code in bedrooms, living rooms, and most habitable spaces in newer construction.

Do Older Homes Need These?

Existing homes generally aren't required to retrofit unless doing significant renovations — but that doesn't mean they shouldn't. Most older homes were built before these protections existed, which means they're operating without safeguards that we now know prevent deaths and fires. Adding GFCI protection to bathrooms and kitchens in particular is one of the most practical safety investments a homeowner can make. If you're in Dover, Portsmouth, Exeter, Rochester, Durham, Hampton, Newmarket, Stratham, or anywhere across the Seacoast — including South Berwick, Kittery, and York in Southern Maine — we can evaluate your home's outlets and bring them up to current safety standards.

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