Yes, you can wire your doorbell yourself! Let us take the mystery out of wiring a doorbell transformer with this step-by-step guide.
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Time
1-4 hours
Complexity
Beginner
Cost
$20-50
Introduction
Modern doorbells are wireless, smart and even provide video. But many models currently in homes, even some of today's popular smart doorbells, are wired. So don't be intimidated if you need to wire a doorbell transformer. You can do this!
Whether you're replacing an old doorbell or adding a new one, wiring the transformer itself is the same. One side has black, white and green wires for the line voltage and ground, and the other side has terminals to allow low-voltage wires to feed your doorbell. Doorbells can't handle the power coming from your electrical panel, so the voltage must be lowered, usually between 8V and 24V. That's what the transformer does.
If you are replacing an old doorbell transformer, start with Step 1. If you are adding a new one, follow the directions on your new kit to add the doorbell and route the power wires and low-voltage bell wires to the transformer location. Then follow the steps for wiring the new transformer below.
Here's how to wire a doorbell transformer.
Tools Required
Lineman's pliers
Non-contact voltage tester
Screwdriver
Wire strippers
Materials Required
Doorbell transformer
Wire nuts
Project step-by-step (7)
Step 1
Find the transformer
Locate the doorbell transformer, if replacing.
The transformer may be in the garage or utility room, near the doorbell chime or in the attic.
Ally Childress for Family Handyman
Step 2
Turn off the power
Turn off the breaker that controls the doorbell.
If you don’t know which breaker it is, turn off one breaker at a time and test the 120V power coming into the box by holding a non-contact voltage tester to the cable until you find the right one.
Strip 1/2-inch of insulation from the black, white and green wires.
Splice the ground wires from the power, the transformer and the electrical box (if metal) together.
If you have a metal box but no wire present to ground it, add a grounding pigtail by screwing the green grounding screw attached to the pigtail into the metal box’s screw terminal.
Splice the two neutral (white) wires, then splice the hot (black) wires.
Close up the electrical box housing the 120V transformer connections.
Turn on the breaker.
Test the doorbell.
Ally ChildressAlly Childress for Family Handyman for Family Handyman
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