Common Defects

Double-Tapped Breakers -- what Blaine homeowners need to know.

Double-tapped breakers — two wires landed on a single breaker terminal not rated for it — are one of the most common electrical findings in Blaine inspections, found in roughly 40% of pre-2000 panels we open.

GFCI outlet tested during an electrical inspection
GFCI outlet tested during an electrical inspection

How We Document It

We document double-tapped breakers with annotated photos, measurements where applicable, and a written priority recommendation routed by safety priority. When the finding warrants it, we refer you to a Minnesota-licensed specialist for repair -- never to anyone we have a financial relationship with.

Electrical wiring and junction inspected in a Blaine home
Electrical wiring and junction inspected in a Blaine home

What It Means for Your Deal

Defects discovered during inspection are leverage. Whether you negotiate a credit, request a repair, or walk away, our reports give you and your agent the documentation needed to move forward with clarity. Report in 24 Hours turnaround means you keep your inspection contingency window intact.

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More about this service in Blaine

The defect is straightforward: only specific breakers (notably some Square D QO models) are rated for two conductors; everything else creates a loose-connection fire risk. We see double-taps most often when a homeowner has added a circuit (basement finish, garage outlet, attic light) without adding a breaker. The fix is cheap — an electrician adds a tandem breaker or a sub-panel — but the safety risk is real. We document every double-tap with a panel photo and recommend correction by a licensed electrician before close.

FAQ

Common questions about Double-Tapped Breakers

Severity depends on the specific finding, the location, and the home's age. We rate every defect we document by safety priority -- Safety / Major / Minor / Maintenance -- so you know exactly what's a deal-breaker and what's a Saturday-afternoon fix.
Some defects (Federal Pacific panels, polybutylene, knob-and-tube, active mold, recall-class plumbing) trigger insurance carrier requirements. We document every finding so your carrier and lender have the information they need.
They can -- but you have leverage. Most Minnesota purchase agreements include an inspection contingency that allows you to renegotiate, request credits, or walk away within the contingency window.
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