Ontario homeowners — especially rural customers in Renfrew County, Eastern Ontario, Grey-Bruce, and Kawartha Lakes — should prepare for outages lasting up to 72 hours as a baseline. This guide covers everything you need to do before, during, and after a power outage to protect your home, family, and property.
Ontario Power Outage Reality
Ontario has two major outage seasons:
- Winter (November–March): Ice storms are the most destructive — freezing rain coats power lines and causes them to snap. The 1998 Ice Storm left 1.4 million Canadians without power, some for over 5 weeks.
- Summer (June–August): Severe thunderstorms and tornadoes cause localized, shorter-duration outages. Heat waves also stress the grid, sometimes causing rolling brownouts.
Hydro One's average customer experiences about 1.5 sustained outages per year at the provincial level, but rural customers — especially those on long distribution lines — see significantly more frequent and longer outages.
Before an Outage: Preparedness Checklist
Do these things now, before any outage happens:
🏠 Home Protection
- ☐ Install a battery-powered CO detector near sleeping areas and on every floor — mandatory if you plan to use a generator
- ☐ Install a battery-powered smoke detector on every floor (test monthly)
- ☐ Know where your main electrical panel is and how to turn off individual circuits
- ☐ Know where your main water shutoff is (frozen pipe emergencies)
- ☐ Install a sump pump battery backup if you have a sump pump (critical in Ontario basements)
- ☐ Check that your gas fireplace or wood stove works independently of electricity
- ☐ Keep at least one manual can opener in your kitchen
⚡ Power Backup
- ☐ Choose and acquire your backup power system (calculate what you need →)
- ☐ If using a portable generator: test it monthly, keep oil changed, store it with fuel stabilizer
- ☐ Store at least 20–40 litres of gasoline in approved containers (Ontario allows up to 120L)
- ☐ Have a proper extension cord rated for your generator's output (12 AWG minimum, outdoor-rated)
- ☐ Consider a transfer switch — eliminates backfeed risk and makes generator use safer (requires ESA permit)
- ☐ Keep a portable power station charged for short outages and sensitive electronics
- ☐ Charge all devices (phones, laptops, portable batteries) when a major storm is forecast
🥶 Winter-Specific Prep
- ☐ Have at least 72 hours of food and water that doesn't require refrigeration or cooking
- ☐ Keep sleeping bags rated to -10°C for each person in the home
- ☐ Have a plan for where you'll stay if the outage is extended (warming centre, family/friends)
- ☐ Keep the minimum heat plan ready: which rooms will you close off? What's the coldest your pipes can get?
- ☐ Know your home's freeze threshold — most Ontario homes can maintain above-freezing temps indoors for 8–24 hours without heat, depending on insulation and outdoor temperature
- ☐ If you have a gas furnace: it will not run without electricity. You need backup power for the blower motor (~700W) at minimum
💧 Rural Properties: Well & Septic
- ☐ Know your well pump's wattage — this is often the highest-draw appliance on a rural property
- ☐ Have a dedicated generator circuit or properly sized portable generator for the well pump
- ☐ Store at least 20–30 litres of drinking water in case the well pump can't be powered immediately
- ☐ Keep your pressure tank in good shape — a properly pressurized tank gives you several flushes after power loss
- ☐ Understand that your septic system may also rely on electricity (pumped septic requires power)
See our dedicated guide: How to Power Your Well Pump During an Outage →
📱 Communications & Information
- ☐ Download your utility's outage app or bookmark their outage map
- ☐ Have a battery-powered or hand-crank radio for emergency broadcasts (CBC Radio is Ontario's emergency broadcaster)
- ☐ Keep a written list of emergency contacts (don't rely entirely on your phone)
- ☐ Know your municipality's warming centre locations
- ☐ Sign up for Ontario Emergency Alerts on your cell phone (already automatic via national alert system)
📋 Emergency Kit (Ontario Standard)
Keep these items accessible — not packed away in a storage room:
- Water: 4 litres per person per day, minimum 72-hour supply (12+ litres per person)
- Non-perishable food: 3+ days for everyone in the household
- Manual can opener
- Flashlights + extra batteries (or rechargeable with a charged power bank)
- First aid kit
- Battery-powered or hand-crank radio
- Extra blankets and warm clothing
- Cash in small bills (ATMs and debit may not work)
- Important documents (ID, insurance, medical records) in a waterproof container
- Pet supplies if applicable
- 7-day supply of prescription medications
- Portable phone charger (power bank), kept charged
During an Outage: What to Do
First 30 Minutes
- Don't panic. Most Ontario outages resolve within a few hours.
- Check if neighbours are affected — if just your home, the issue may be at your meter or panel.
- Check your utility's outage map or call their outage line (see contacts below).
- Turn off or unplug sensitive electronics (TVs, computers, appliances) — power surges on restoration can damage them.
- Leave one light switch in the ON position so you'll know when power is restored.
- Deploy backup power if needed — start generator (outdoors, 3m+ from openings), or activate battery backup.
Managing Food Safety
- A full refrigerator holds safe temperature for 4–6 hours if unopened
- A full freezer holds safe temperature for 24–48 hours if unopened (12–24 hours if half-full)
- Keep the refrigerator/freezer closed as much as possible
- If the outage will exceed these times: connect the fridge to your generator, or move frozen items outdoors in winter (below 0°C)
- When in doubt, throw it out — food poisoning risk is not worth it
Heating Your Home
Safe indoor heating options:
- Gas fireplace (most are fan-assisted but the burner works without electricity — just no blower)
- Wood-burning fireplace or wood stove
- Propane heaters rated for indoor use (e.g., Mr. Heater Buddy series) — open a window slightly for ventilation
- Generator powering your gas furnace blower (outdoor generator only)
- Add layers of clothing and use sleeping bags to stay warm without heating
Water During Rural Outages
If you're on a well and don't have generator power for the pump:
- Your pressure tank will provide a limited number of flushes — use them wisely
- Use stored water for drinking and cooking
- For toilet flushing, you can use water from a pond, pool, rain barrel, or melted snow (doesn't need to be potable)
- If you have a neighbour with power or municipal water, ask to fill containers
Protecting Pipes from Freezing
If the outage extends through a cold night and your furnace isn't running:
- Open cabinet doors under sinks (especially on exterior walls) to let house air circulate around pipes
- Allow faucets to drip — moving water is less likely to freeze
- If you're leaving the house, turn off the main water supply and drain the pipes (open the lowest faucet)
- Know where your main shutoff is — if a pipe does freeze and burst, you need to shut water off fast
After an Outage: Recovery Checklist
- ☐ Disconnect generator before utility power returns (if using extension cords)
- ☐ Check all circuit breakers — reset any that tripped
- ☐ Let major appliances restart gradually — don't turn everything on at once
- ☐ Check your refrigerator/freezer food safety (see guidelines above)
- ☐ Check your sump pump — make sure it's operational before the next rain
- ☐ Look for signs of water damage, frozen pipes, or structural issues
- ☐ Refuel and service your generator (change oil if you ran it for extended periods)
- ☐ Recharge your portable power stations and power banks
- ☐ Replenish any emergency supplies you used
- ☐ Document any damage for insurance purposes (photos + inventory)
Ontario Emergency Contacts
| Utility / Service | Contact | Area Served |
|---|---|---|
| Hydro One | 1-888-HYDRO-11 (1-888-493-7611) | Rural Ontario, most of province |
| Toronto Hydro | 416-542-8000 | City of Toronto |
| Hydro Ottawa | 613-738-5499 | Ottawa / Carleton |
| Enova Power (Kitchener-Waterloo) | 519-745-4771 | Waterloo Region |
| Alectra Utilities | 1-833-253-2872 | Hamilton, Barrie, Guelph, Markham, Mississauga, Vaughan, Brampton |
| Power Outage in Canada (map) | poweroutage.ca | All utilities |
| Ontario Emergency Management | 1-888-314-0300 | Province-wide emergencies |
| Emergency Social Services | Contact your municipality | Warming centres, shelters |
Outage Duration Planning Guide
| Outage Duration | Key Concerns | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| Under 4 hours | Minor inconvenience | Keep fridge closed, use phone backup power, report outage |
| 4–8 hours | Food safety begins, furnace off | Deploy portable generator or battery for furnace and fridge |
| 8–24 hours | Food spoilage risk, home cooling | Generator essential for furnace + fridge, monitor indoor temps |
| 24–72 hours | Pipe freeze risk in winter, water if on well | Standby generator ideal, manage fuel carefully, consider shelter alternative |
| 72+ hours | Extended emergency, community impact | Contact local municipality, consider temporary relocation, conserve fuel |
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I do first when the power goes out in Ontario?
Check if neighbours are affected, then report the outage to your utility. Deploy backup power if you have it. Turn off sensitive electronics. Leave one light switch on so you'll see when power returns. Stay calm — most Ontario outages resolve within a few hours.
How long do Ontario power outages typically last?
Most Ontario outages are resolved within 1–8 hours. However, ice storms and major weather events can cause outages lasting days. The 1998 Eastern Canada Ice Storm caused outages lasting up to 5 weeks in some areas. Rural customers in Eastern Ontario and Renfrew County regularly experience 8–24 hour outages from localized storms.
How do I report a power outage in Ontario?
Hydro One customers: 1-888-HYDRO-11 or hydroone.com/outages. Toronto Hydro: 416-542-8000. Hydro Ottawa: 613-738-5499. For other areas, check your electricity bill for your local distribution company's number. You can also use poweroutage.ca to check regional outage status.
At what temperature will pipes freeze in an Ontario home?
Pipes typically begin to freeze when wall temperatures drop below -6°C. Most well-insulated Ontario homes can maintain above-freezing pipe temperatures for 8–24+ hours without heat, depending on how cold it is outside. Pipes on exterior walls and in uninsulated crawl spaces are at greatest risk. If the outage is forecast to extend overnight during a cold snap, take protective measures.
Are there warming centres during Ontario outages?
Yes — municipalities are required to open warming centres during extended outages and cold snaps. Contact your city or town hall, or check local news. During major events, school gymnasiums, community centres, and arenas are typically opened. If you have mobility or health issues, pre-register with your municipality's emergency social services.