Outdoor Lights Not Working Lane Cove

Emergency Response in Lane Cove

Licensed electrician dispatched fast · 24/7 · 30–60 min

24/7 Emergency Response Licensed & Insured 30–60 Min Arrival Upfront Pricing

Tree-heavy suburbs — Wahroonga, Killara, Pymble, Hunters Hill, Lane Cove — see the highest rate of overhead consumer mains damage in metro Sydney. East-coast lows and storm-driven branches account for hundreds of point-of-attachment and service-mains callouts every storm season.

On the leafy North Shore, big gardens often run long outdoor lighting and automation runs that fail at switches, sensors or low-voltage transformers rather than the globe. With the strong data and automation demand around Chatswood, we sort whether it's the light, the controller or the cabling underneath.

⚠ Stop — Call Immediately if You Notice Any of These:
  • A burning smell from any outdoor fitting
  • Visible water dripping from a fitting
  • Soot, char, or melting on any fitting
  • Sparks visible from a fitting
  • A fitting that is hot to touch
  • Tingles from any outdoor metalwork — fence, rail, gate, BBQ
  • An RCD that trips when outdoor lights switch on
  • A buzzing or crackling sound from any fitting
Full guide: Why Are My Outdoor Lights Not Working? — causes, FAQs & expert advice

About Why Are My Outdoor Lights Not Working?

Outdoor lights fail most often because of a failed photocell or PIR sensor, water ingress into a fitting, a tripped RCD, or a perished cable. Water inside a fitting or a damaged cable is a genuine shock and fire hazard — if your lights are intermittent or your RCD keeps tripping, call 0433 462 902 immediately or book a same-day diagnostic.

Sydney’s coastal suburbs — Bondi, Coogee, Manly, Cronulla, Avalon — see salt-driven corrosion destroy fittings and cable sheaths years faster than inland properties. Outdoor circuits also run the longest cable runs in most homes, with the most intermittent switching and weatherproof seals to maintain, which is why they appear disproportionately in our Sydney callouts. Sydney Electrical Service is dispatched 24/7 across every metropolitan suburb.

What to Do Right Now in Lane Cove

  1. Try the manual switch (if any) to confirm power is reaching the circuit.
  2. Check the switchboard for tripped breakers or RCDs on outdoor circuits.
  3. Reset any tripped device once. If it won't hold, leave it OFF and call us.
  4. For sensor-controlled lights, cover the photocell to simulate darkness and see if lights activate.
  5. For PIR motion lights, walk through the detection zone in low light to test.
  6. Inspect each fitting visually (during daylight) for water, damage, soot, or insect ingress.
  7. Try replacing the bulb in accessible fittings. LED retrofit bulbs need to match the fitting's voltage and driver.
  8. Photograph any damaged fittings for our diagnostic dispatch.
  9. For total circuit failure with no obvious bulb cause, book a Level 2 electrician.

Electrical work in Lane Cove

Lane Cove has a real mix — mid-century brick homes and post-war cottages on the bushland fringe, a heavy concentration of 1960s and 70s walk-up strata flats around the town centre, and newer apartment buildings closer to the village. The bushland and Lane Cove River setting is lovely but the older flat blocks tend to share tired common-area switchboards, ageing sub-mains and metering that hasn't kept pace with how people use power today.

For the older red-brick units we handle strata switchboard upgrades, RCD installation and rewiring of common circuits. In the freestanding homes we see undersized boards, mixed-vintage wiring and not enough capacity for renovations. Bigger family homes on the larger blocks often warrant a three-phase upgrade, which is Level 2 work — new consumer mains, point-of-attachment and the network connection coordinated with Ausgrid. Bushland proximity also makes solid earthing and surge protection worthwhile here.

Common Questions

The most likely cause is a failed photocell or PIR sensor — both have finite service lives, particularly in coastal Sydney where salt air shortens them. Replacement is straightforward but requires a licensed electrician.
The bulb is fine but the sensor has failed in the "always on" or "always off" position, depending on the model. Some sensors also have user-adjustable sensitivity and timeout that may have drifted. We can test, recalibrate, or replace as needed.
Sometimes — if the fault was transient water ingress that has dried out. More often, water has reached terminations and corrosion has begun. Inspecting fittings during daylight and replacing damaged seals is the right approach.
Many low-voltage garden lights run on 12 V or 24 V for safety in the wet. The transformer steps mains 230 V down to the lower voltage. Transformers do fail — typically with a buzzing or hot housing and lights that flicker or cut out.

Why Lane Cove Residents Choose Us

Tree-canopy storm damage accounts for around a quarter of our North Shore emergency callouts. We coordinate with arborists, Ausgrid, and roof tradespeople routinely for the multi-trade jobs that follow major storm events in Wahroonga, Killara, Pymble, and Hunters Hill.

Also serving nearby

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Electricians across the Inner North

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24/7 Emergency Electrician — Lane Cove

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