

Power surge appliance damage costs U.S. homeowners over $5 billion each year, according to the Insurance Information Institute. One small voltage spike from a lightning strike, downed power line, or faulty grid switch is enough to fry the circuit board inside your refrigerator, dryer, or HVAC system in less than a second.
You will learn what a power surge is, why surges destroy appliances, the warning signs to watch for after a storm, and the exact steps you should take to protect every appliance in your home. By the end, you will know when to call a repair technician and when an appliance is beyond saving.
A power surge is a brief spike in electrical voltage above the standard 120 volts used in most U.S. homes. The spike lasts only a fraction of a second, but the voltage rise reaches thousands of volts in some cases. Anything plugged in at that moment takes the hit.
Surges come from two main sources:
Surge protection is the system that blocks or redirects this excess voltage before it reaches your appliances. The protection works on three levels:
A whole-house unit handles the big external surges. Point-of-use protectors catch what slips through. Together, they form a layered defense.
Modern appliances run on sensitive microprocessors and circuit boards. These components are built for stable voltage. When a surge hits, the excess current burns through the smallest part first, the control board, then spreads to motors, compressors, and heating elements.
Here is what happens inside each appliance:
The damage is not always immediate. A weakened component runs for weeks before it gives out. This delay tricks homeowners into thinking the surge caused no harm.

Check your appliances after every storm or power outage. Look for these signs:
If you notice any of these signs, unplug the appliance and call a technician. Running a damaged appliance puts your home at risk of an electrical fire.
Storm damage to appliances follows a pattern. Follow these steps the moment power returns:
Appliance protection after storm events depends on speed. The faster you spot a problem, the better your chances of repair instead of replacement.
Appliance surge protection works best when you combine three layers. Here is the setup we recommend at Appliance Care Of Atlanta:
A licensed electrician installs the unit at your main electrical panel. It costs between $300 and $700 with installation and stops up to 80% of incoming surges. This is your first line of defense against lightning and grid surges.
Plug your refrigerator, washer, dryer, dishwasher, HVAC system, TV, and computer into a UL-listed surge protector with a joule rating above 1,000. Cheap power strips do not block surges. Replace surge protectors every 3 to 5 years or after a major surge event.
When a thunderstorm hits, unplug small appliances like microwaves, coffee makers, toasters, and computers. No surge protector beats an unplugged cord.
Old wiring, loose connections, and outdated panels make internal surges worse. An electrician inspects your panel, grounding, and outlets every 3 to 5 years.
A well-maintained appliance handles small voltage fluctuations better than a worn-out one. Replace HVAC capacitors before they fail, clean refrigerator coils twice a year, and check dryer vents quarterly.
Surge damage falls into three categories:
A certified technician runs diagnostics before quoting the work. Never accept a repair quote without a written diagnostic report.
Most standard policies cover surge damage from lightning strikes. Coverage for grid-related surges varies by carrier. Read your policy and look for “power surge” or “artificially generated electricity” clauses. Keep these documents ready for a claim:
File the claim within 30 days. Some insurers deny late claims.
Power surge appliance damage needs fast action. The longer you wait, the worse the repair gets. Appliance Care Of Atlanta repairs refrigerators, dryers, washers, dishwashers, and ovens damaged by surges, storms, and outages across the Atlanta metro area.
Call Appliance Care Of Atlanta today for same-day diagnostic service and honest repair quotes. Our certified technicians inspect your appliance, identify the damage, and get your home running again.
Yes. A surge weakens internal components without stopping the appliance right away. The damaged part fails days or weeks later. This is why post-storm inspections matter even when everything looks fine.
A direct lightning hit overwhelms most surge protectors. Whole-house units handle nearby strikes and grid surges, but a direct strike requires unplugging your appliances. Combine surge protection with unplugging for full coverage.
The compressor still works, but the control board, inverter, or sensor took damage. The fridge cools at first, then loses temperature control. Have a technician inspect it within a week to prevent food spoilage and complete failure.
If the dryer is dead, shows error codes, or runs but does not heat, the control board or thermal fuse likely blew. Both are surge-related failures. A repair technician confirms the cause with a multimeter test.
Replace point-of-use surge protectors every 3 to 5 years. Replace immediately after a major surge event, even if the unit looks fine. The internal MOV components wear down with each surge they absorb.
27 May 2026 Appliance repair tips