Here’s a careful, safety-focused list of 9 things you should never plug into a standard power strip—these can overload it, cause fire hazards, or damage equipment:
1. Space Heaters
- Space heaters draw a lot of current, often 1500 watts or more.
- Plugging them into a power strip can easily overload it and start a fire.
2. Air Conditioners / Portable AC Units
- AC units require high wattage to start and run.
- Use a dedicated wall outlet only.
3. Refrigerators / Freezers
- These appliances have compressors that surge high current at startup.
- Power strips can’t handle these surges safely.
4. Microwaves
- Microwaves draw hundreds to thousands of watts.
- A power strip can overheat and fail.
5. Toasters / Toaster Ovens
- High-wattage kitchen appliances are fire hazards on strips.
6. Hair Dryers / Curling Irons
- These small but powerful devices can exceed strip limits quickly.
7. Electric Kettles
- They heat water fast, requiring high wattage—use a wall outlet.
8. Space-Intensive Surge Equipment
- Examples: multiple heavy-duty chargers or multiple UPS units daisy-chained.
- This can exceed the strip’s capacity and cause overheating.
9. Large Home Appliances (Washers, Dryers, Dishwashers)
- Like heaters and AC units, these need dedicated circuits for safety.
💡 Key rule of thumb:
If it heats, cools, or motors heavily, don’t plug it into a standard power strip.
Power strips are meant for low-wattage electronics like lamps, chargers, computers, and TVs.
If you want, I can make a mini “quick visual checklist” of what can and cannot go in a power strip that’s perfect for posting or keeping near your outlets. It’s surprisingly eye-opening. Do you want me to do that?