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Generator Running But No Power to Your House? Here's What's Actually Wrong

The generator starts, the engine sounds normal, but the house stays completely dark. If you are dealing with a generator running but no power to house situation, the problem usually comes from the transfer switch, not the generator itself.

Homeowners never think about the automatic transfer switch because it sits quietly beside the electrical panel until an outage hits. That switch acts as the bridge between the standby generator and the home’s electrical system. When the switch fails, the generator can run normally while zero power reaches the house.

In Upstate New York, this problem shows up most often during the first major outage of fall or winter after the generator has spent months sitting mostly unused.

What the Automatic Transfer Switch Does

The automatic transfer switch monitors utility power coming into the home. When it detects an outage, it signals the generator to start and then transfers the home’s electrical load from utility power to generator power.

If the transfer switch stops working correctly, the generator still starts and runs, but the electrical load never transfers to the house. That leaves the home without power even while the generator continues operating outside.

Three Reasons Your Generator Is Running But Not Powering Your Home

Most standby generators fail to transfer power for one of three reasons: the transfer switch itself fails, the control board loses communication, or the switch stops detecting utility power correctly. In all three situations, the generator can still start and run normally while the house stays without power.

The Transfer Switch Itself Has Failed

Mechanical switch failure is one of the most common causes of generator won't transfer power problems.

The internal switch contacts wear down over time, especially on older systems that have gone years without regular service. In many homes, the generator starts correctly, but the transfer switch never makes the audible click that moves power to the breaker panel.

This is not a safe DIY repair. Transfer switch replacement requires a licensed electrician and proper permitting.

If the transfer switch itself has failed, generator repair usually starts with ATS testing, voltage checks, and inspection of the switch contacts before replacement gets discussed.

The ATS Control Board Has Lost Communication

Modern standby systems use a control board to communicate between the generator and the transfer switch. If the board loses communication because of moisture, damaged wiring, or internal failure, the generator starts but the switch never receives the transfer signal.

This type of automatic transfer switch failure often shows up after storms or long dormant periods.

The homeowner usually notices:

  • Generator starts normally
  • No power reaches the home
  • Fault lights or error codes appear
  • Transfer switch stays inactive

Generac standby generators and Kohler systems both store diagnostic fault codes that technicians can pull during service visits.

The ATS Is Not Detecting Utility Power Loss

Some transfer switches fail because the voltage-sensing circuit stops detecting utility failure correctly.

In that situation, the switch continues reading the utility line as active even during a real outage. The generator starts, but the ATS never transfers the load because it does not recognize the outage condition.

This problem becomes more common in older Upstate New York systems exposed to years of winter moisture, freezing temperatures, and seasonal temperature swings.

Can You Manually Override a Transfer Switch?

Some systems include a manual transfer lever or bypass mechanism, but using it safely requires understanding how the generator and utility power interact.

Backfeed risk is real. Accidentally energizing utility lines during an outage creates serious danger for utility workers and the home itself.

If you are not completely familiar with the system, manual override should be handled by a technician instead of treated like a DIY repair.

Does This Happen More Often After a Long Dormant Period?

Yes. A lot of calls about a generator running but no power to the house happen during the first major outage of fall, when the system finally tries carrying a full electrical load after sitting mostly unused through summer.

Generators sitting mostly idle through warmer months can develop transfer switch issues that only appear once the system tries carrying a full electrical load during a storm outage.

The weekly self-test cycle helps, but it does not replace annual generator maintenance before storm season begins.

Scheduling annual generator maintenance in early fall gives technicians a chance to test ATS communication, inspect transfer switch wiring, and identify failing components before winter outages arrive.

What a Technician Does When Your Generator Won't Transfer Power

A service call for this problem usually starts with confirming generator voltage output and checking whether the ATS is receiving the transfer signal correctly.

The technician checks:

  • Generator voltage output
  • Transfer switch continuity
  • ATS control board communication
  • Utility voltage sensing
  • Moisture or corrosion damage
  • Fault codes stored in the generator controller

That testing isolates whether the problem comes from the generator itself, the automatic transfer switch, or communication failure between the two systems.

Generator Running With No Power to the House in Buffalo, Rochester, or Syracuse?

If your generator is running but no power is reaching the house during an active outage, call for service immediately instead of waiting for utility power to come back on.

Home Power Systems provides emergency generator repair across Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, and surrounding parts of Western and Central New York.

If the system is running but the house still has no power, call (716) 314-1743 or schedule an appointment now for emergency service.

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