The fix depends on how the fan is wired or controlled. In many bathrooms, the fan is tied to the light switch through a timer or humidistat, so it may keep running after the light is turned on or off, and the adjustment is usually a wiring or fan-setting issue rather than the switch itself.

What to check

  • If it’s a bathroom extractor fan: look for a small timer dial or adjustment screw behind the cover, because many models are set to run-on for a period after the light changes.
  • If it’s on a separate switch or isolator: there may be a dedicated switch elsewhere that controls the fan independently.
  • If it’s a ceiling fan with a light: some remotes or smart controls can link the light and fan together, and the device may need to be re-paired or separated in the app/remote settings.
  • If the fan comes on because of the light’s power surge: it could be electrical interference or a shared circuit issue, which is sometimes helped by moving the plug to a different outlet or adding filtering, but that depends on the setup.

Most likely fixes

  1. Turn down the run-on timer if the fan has one. Many extractor fans have a built-in delay that can be reduced with a small adjustment dial.
  1. Separate the fan from the light switch circuit so it only receives power from its own control. That usually requires rewiring and should be done by a qualified electrician.
  1. Check smart controls or remotes if the fan/light is “smart.” Removing the fan from a room group or changing it from a light to a switch device can stop the light command from affecting it.
  1. Inspect for a humidistat mode if the fan keeps running based on moisture, because then the issue is not the light at all.

Safety note

If this is a wired bathroom fan, do not open the unit or change wiring unless you know the circuit is fully isolated , because these fans can have a permanent live feed even when the light is off.

What I’d do first

  • Find the fan model.
  • Look for a timer or humidistat setting.
  • Check whether there is a separate isolator switch.
  • If it’s still linked to the light, have an electrician rewire it so the fan is controlled independently.

TL;DR: Most of the time, the fan is either set with a timer/humidistat or wired to the light circuit, and the real fix is adjusting the timer or having the fan rewired for separate control.