Why an RV plug gets hot
Heat usually comes from resistance. A loose blade, worn campground receptacle, corroded adapter, damaged shore cord, weak neutral, overloaded circuit or failing RV inlet can turn normal current into dangerous heat. The breaker may not trip because the problem is often a poor connection, not a simple overload.
What to check first
- Turn off large loads such as air conditioning, electric water heater and microwave.
- Switch the pedestal breaker off before unplugging if you can do it safely.
- Inspect both sides of every adapter, the cord end, and the RV inlet for heat marks, melting, odor or looseness.
- Do not reuse any damaged adapter or cord end. Replacing the cheap part is not optional if it has overheated.
- If the campground receptacle is loose or burned, ask for a different site or pedestal service.
Common causes on 30 amp RVs
Thirty amp RVs often run close to their limit in summer. One rooftop A/C, converter charging, refrigerator electric mode and water heater electric mode can stack up quickly. But load alone is not the whole story. A clean, tight 30 amp connection should not melt. Heat at one point usually means that point has resistance.
Common causes on 50 amp RVs
A 50 amp RV uses two 120-volt hot legs. A loose neutral, damaged cord end or weak receptacle can create strange symptoms: some appliances work, others act weak, electronics reset, or one side of the coach loses power. Treat heat or discoloration on a 50 amp plug seriously.
When to call for help
Call the campground, an electrician or an RV technician if the pedestal is damaged, the RV inlet is heat-marked, the plug continues heating with reduced loads, or you see any melted plastic. Do not sand blades thinner, bend them to fit, or keep using a loose outlet because “it still works.”
FAQ
Is a slightly warm RV plug normal?
Slight warmth under heavy load can happen, especially in hot weather. Hot, soft, loose, darkened, smelly or uncomfortable-to-touch parts are not normal.
Can I just use a new adapter?
Only if the adapter was the damaged part and the pedestal, cord end and RV inlet are clean, tight and undamaged. If more than one part overheated, replace or repair all affected parts.
Will a surge protector stop this?
An EMS/surge protector can help with voltage and wiring faults, but it cannot make a worn receptacle or damaged plug safe. You still need tight, clean physical connections.