Label the fuses in your fuse box, identifying which areas of your house are covered by each fuse. Keep on hand three or four replacement fuses for each kind of fuse in your fuse box so you are prepared for power outages and can replace blown fuses quickly.
Look for the blown fuse in your fuse box by looking at the clear window on top of each fuse. If it is cloudy, it has blown. Remove the blown fuse by unscrewing it from the panel.
Screw in a new fuse identical in type and amperage to the blown fuse. Never replace a fuse with a fuse of higher amperage; this is a fire hazard. If power is restored and the circuit blows again, there is a problem such as a short in the system; call an electrician.
Locate your home's circuit breaker panel. Panels are usually in a laundry room, basement or garage and look like a small metal door set into the wall.
Open the circuit breaker panel door, and look down the rows of levers for one that is out of position from the others. It will be in the "off" position.
Flip the breaker lever all the way off. You must turn the lever off completely before you can reset it and turn it back to the "on" position.
Turn the breaker to the "on" position. If this doesn't restore power, try turning it off and on a second time. If power is restored and then goes off again, you have a problem -- probably a short -- that will need to be fixed by an electrician.