In a true emergency with no other option, yes — attempt to use expired AED pads rather than do nothing. But understand what you’re actually risking: the conductive gel that bridges the pad to the patient’s skin degrades over time, and a degraded pad can fail to register a connection, deliver an uneven shock, or cause the AED to abort the analyze cycle entirely.
Some defibrillation attempt is statistically better than none, but expired pads are not a reliable substitute for in-date ones, and “we have pads, even if they’re old” is not a safe baseline to plan around.
Here’s the detail almost nobody explains clearly: expiration on an AED pad isn’t a legal formality like a food sell-by date that’s mostly about liability. It’s tied to a specific, measurable physical process — the hydrogel drying out — and that process doesn’t happen on a predictable day. A pad expired by 2 weeks might work perfectly. A pad expired by 8 months might fail on contact. There’s no way to tell which one you’re holding just by looking at the package. That uncertainty, not the calendar date itself, is the actual risk.
This article is about that risk specifically: what happens mechanically when expired pads are used, how the risk scales with how expired they are, and how to think through the decision if you’re ever standing in front of an AED with no time to think.
📋 Not in an emergency right now? If you just need to know how to swap and dispose of expired pads properly, the step-by-step replacement and disposal guide covers that directly.
What actually happens inside an expired pad
AED pads work because a layer of conductive hydrogel sits between the electrode and the patient’s skin. The gel does two jobs at once: it sticks the pad to the skin, and it conducts electrical current evenly across the contact surface. Both functions degrade together as the gel ages, but not always at the same rate:
🔗 Adhesion failure
Happens first in most cases. The gel gets tacky-but-weak, then dry-and-brittle. A pad with weak adhesion can lift at the edges during chest compressions, breaking contact mid-rescue.
⚡ Conductivity failure
Happens as the gel dries unevenly. Dry patches inside the gel layer create pockets of high resistance, so current that should flow smoothly across the whole pad instead concentrates where moisture remains. This is the failure mode that causes a weak, misdirected, or partial shock.
⚙️ The quiet failure mode: Modern AEDs (Philips HeartStart, Zoll AED Plus, Cardiac Science Powerheart, Defibtech Lifeline, Stryker LifePak) run a pre-shock check that measures impedance — essentially testing how well current can pass through the pad-to-skin connection. If dried gel creates too much resistance, the device detects a poor connection and may refuse to advance to the shock, even with pads correctly placed. This is the single most common way expired pads fail in practice — not a dramatic device malfunction, just a quiet refusal to proceed.
How much does “how expired” actually matter?
This is the part most resources skip, and it’s the part that actually helps you make a real decision.
| Time past expiration | What’s likely happening to the gel | Practical risk level |
|---|---|---|
| 1–30 days | Minimal change, gel is likely still mostly hydrated | Low Not compliant, not something to plan around |
| 1–6 months | Adhesion starting to weaken, gel beginning uneven drying | Moderate Connection may register, but lifting risk grows |
| 6–18 months | Meaningful gel dry-out, adhesion noticeably reduced | High Increasing chance the impedance check fails outright |
| 18+ months | Gel likely significantly degraded | Very High Treat as non-functional for planning purposes |
⚠️ Two things to be precise about: First, this table describes tendencies, not guarantees — storage conditions (heat, humidity, how well the package was sealed) shift these numbers in both directions. Second, and more important: none of these risk levels are something to accept on purpose. This table exists to help you understand what you’re dealing with if you discover an expired set during an actual emergency, not to suggest any window of expiration is fine to plan around.
If it’s the only AED you have, what should you actually do?
This is the real-world decision tree, for the specific moment when there’s a cardiac arrest, an AED is present, and the pads are expired.
- Use it anyway. A defibrillation attempt with degraded pads still gives the patient a chance the absence of any AED does not. Survival odds drop roughly 10% per minute without a shock, so delay while debating pad freshness costs more than the pad’s condition does.
- Follow the AED’s prompts exactly. If the device proceeds through its analysis and advises a shock, deliver it. If the device detects a poor connection and prompts you to check pad placement, press the pads down firmly — sometimes a poor seal rather than dry gel is the actual problem — and re-check.
- If the AED refuses to advance past the connection check, continue high-quality chest compressions without interruption. CPR alone, performed continuously and correctly, is the next-best intervention while waiting for EMS or another AED.
- After the event, regardless of outcome, the pads are now both expired and used. They get logged in the incident report and replaced before the device is needed again. The expired pad replacement and disposal guide covers the exact steps and biohazard handling required once pads have touched a patient.
✅ The throughline across all four steps: Using expired pads is a real, valid choice in a genuine no-alternative emergency. It is not a substitute for having in-date pads in the first place.
Why this is a “should never have to decide this” problem, not a “what’s the right call” problem
The honest framing here is that anyone standing in front of an AED weighing whether the pads are too expired to trust has already had a maintenance failure happen upstream. The decision in the moment is real and sometimes unavoidable, but it’s a symptom of a gap that existed well before the emergency — usually a missed monthly check, or an order that should have gone in 60 days before expiration and didn’t.
⚖️ The legal angle: State Good Samaritan statutes generally extend liability protection to AED use in good faith, but that protection is frequently conditional on the device being reasonably maintained. A facility that knowingly kept significantly expired pads in service, as opposed to one that used expired pads in a genuine emergency with no prior warning of the gap, can find itself on different footing legally. The AED compliance mistakes guide covers how Good Samaritan immunity conditions typically work and why documentation matters so much if this situation is ever scrutinized after the fact.
The fix that actually prevents this decision from ever coming up
Pad expiration tracking fails for a structural reason, not a discipline reason. Adult pads, pediatric pads, and batteries all expire on different schedules. A facility with several AEDs is tracking 6, 10, or more separate dates, each in a different month, often on a spreadsheet that depends on one person remembering to check it.
💡 The goal isn’t a better decision in the moment — it’s never needing to make that decision at all.
Pad Tracking in AED Log closes that gap by tracking adult and pediatric pad expirations separately for every device and firing alerts 60 and 30 days ahead of each one, so the replacement is ordered and on the shelf well before anyone has to ask “are these still good enough to use.”
FAQ
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