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Why Are My Lights Flickering? A Nashville Electrician Explains

Troubleshooting Nashville Electric Pros · Updated May 2026

Flickering lights are one of the most common calls we get from Nashville homeowners. Sometimes it's the bulb. Sometimes it's something you really shouldn't ignore. Here's how to tell the difference.

If your lights are flickering, the right question is: when, where, and how often? The pattern almost always points to the cause. Here are the eight most common reasons we see in Nashville homes.

1. A Bad Bulb or Loose Bulb

The simplest explanation, and worth checking first. Tighten the bulb (with the switch off and bulb cool). If it's a fluorescent or LED, replace it. If flickering follows the bulb when you move it to another fixture, you've found your culprit.

2. An Incompatible Dimmer

LEDs flicker on older dimmers designed for incandescent bulbs. The fix is either dimmer-compatible LEDs or an LED-rated dimmer. This is a frequent issue in remodeled Nashville homes where new LED bulbs went into older fixtures.

3. A Loose Connection at the Fixture or Switch

If one specific fixture flickers — especially when you tap it or when nearby switches are flipped — you're often looking at a loose wire connection. This is a real fire risk and shouldn't be ignored. Turn off the breaker and call a licensed Nashville electrician.

4. A Large Appliance Starting Up

If lights dim briefly when the A/C, dryer, well pump, or refrigerator kicks on, you're seeing the inrush current. A small dip is normal. A noticeable, lengthy dim is not — it can indicate undersized service, loose neutral, or wiring issues.

5. Loose Neutral or Failing Service Connection

If multiple rooms flicker at the same time — especially in a pulsing or random pattern — you may have a loose neutral somewhere in the system. This can occur at the meter, the panel, or somewhere in the main feeder. It is dangerous and can damage electronics throughout your home. This is a situation to address right away.

6. Aluminum Wiring

Many Nashville homes built between 1965 and 1973 have aluminum branch wiring. Aluminum expands and contracts more than copper, and connections can loosen over time, causing arcing and flickering. If your home has aluminum wiring, all device terminations should be checked and remediated.

7. Issues at the Utility

If your neighbors are also experiencing flickering — especially after storms — the problem may be on NES's side, not yours. Report it to your utility. If it's an isolated issue, it's almost always inside your home.

8. Failing Breaker or Panel

Older breakers, especially in Federal Pacific, Zinsco, and Pushmatic panels, can lose contact pressure and cause flickering on the circuits they protect. If flickering follows a single breaker, that breaker — and possibly the panel — needs attention.

How to Know It's Urgent

Call a Nashville electrician right away if you see any of these:

What to Do Right Now

If the flickering is isolated to one bulb or fixture and there are no other symptoms, swap the bulb and check the dimmer. If it's anything beyond that — especially the urgent signs above — schedule a service call. Flickering lights are often the first warning a Nashville home gives you before something more serious.

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