Here’s a surprising fact: your home might be using electricity even while you’re asleep. Not from ghosts. Not from teenagers sneaking into the kitchen at midnight. But from something far more ordinary—and sneakier: vampire power.
Also called phantom load, standby power, or leaking electricity, this is the trickle of energy that devices continue to draw even when they look “off.”
Your television? Still using power while waiting for the remote.
Your coffee maker? Burning watts to keep that glowing clock alive.
Your phone charger? Pulling electricity from the wall, even if no phone is connected.
Over time, all of those invisible drips of electricity add up.
What Exactly Is Vampire Power?
Vampire power is the energy that appliances and electronics use when:
They are turned “off” but remain plugged in.
They sit in standby mode, ready to switch on instantly.
They run features like digital clocks or indicator lights.
They are charging, even if no device is connectedThe biggest culprits include:
Phone and laptop chargers
Smart TVs, soundbars, and gaming consoles
Coffee makers with clocks
Computers, printers, and monitors
Chargers for toothbrushes, controllers, or vacuums
Microwaves with glowing digital displays
According to energy experts, vampire power can account for 5–10% of a home’s total electricity use each year. That’s like paying for a spare room you never actually use.
How Much Money Are You Losing?