How do you split a wall receptacle to be hot on one side and switched on the other?


Quote from Youtube video: The two nuts on the brass side of the outlet fixture. We could then power the bottom half of the outlet to always be on in the top part of the outlet.

How does a half hot outlet work?





A half-hot (or switched) outlet is a duplex outlet that only has one plug permanently “on” while the other half is turned on and off by an ordinary wall switch. This kind of outlet is commonly found in modern construction and in rooms that do not have an overhead light.

How do I make a switched outlet constant hot?

What you need to do is create a parallel circuit. As always, turn off the circuit breaker for that switch before any changes! For the outlet to be a permanently on, non-switch circuit, you need to bypass the switch. As @JimmyFix-It has said, you need to tie the Red wire and the Black Wires (Live) together.

How do you wire a half switch outlet?

Quote from the video:
Quote from Youtube video: Then connect the black wire the upper bronze terminal. We're going to use this red wire as the switch wire I'm going to attach the red switch wire to this bronze terminal.

Are half hot outlets safe?

The National Electrical Code now requires that the two hot wires in a split receptacle must be connected to a double-pole circuit breaker, so that when the breaker is shut off, the action will automatically disconnect both receptacles. That way, the outlet will be safe to work on.

Can a GFCI outlet be wired half hot?





No. GFCIs receptacles cannot be switched, nor can they be split. Best bet is to use a GFCI breaker in the panel, then you can use regular receptacles that you can split and switch, and everything will be protected.

Why would an outlet have 2 hot wires?

The reason for multiple hot/neutral wires for one outlet is that the outlets are daisy-chained together. This means hot/neutral is only coming from one of the wires and it is being sent to the other wire.

What is a pigtail wire?

A pigtail wire is a short length of wire that connects at one end to a screw terminal on an electrical device, with the other end joined to circuit wires with a wire connector (wire nut).

Can you have two hot wires?

Two hots of same circuit – nothing should happen.