Confirm the quote covers testing, certification, and notification for any notifiable work.
£150–£500 for small jobs, £3,000–£5,500 for full house rewiring
Pricing varies by property type, service requirements, and location. Always compare at least 3 like-for-like quotes before appointing.
Typical timeline: 1–2 days for small jobs, 5–10 days for a full house rewire
Verify they are registered with an approved Part P scheme (NICEIC, NAPIT, or ELECSA)
Ask for an Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC) on completion
Check they carry professional indemnity and public liability insurance
Confirm they are experienced with your specific type of work (domestic, commercial, or specialist)
Get at least three itemised quotes before committing
Emergency callouts, evening/weekend visits, and urgent parts sourcing usually increase rates. If your job is non-urgent, planning ahead and combining smaller tasks into one visit often reduces total spend.
Move from pricing research into electrician near-me hiring guidance
Keep every quote anchored to the same scope, access, and finish assumptions before you decide which provider is actually cheaper.
Confirm the quote covers testing, certification, and notification for any notifiable work.
Ask whether the price includes fault finding, making good, and consumer unit labelling where relevant.
Specify fittings, plate finishes, and who supplies materials before you compare numbers.
Request the expected power-down window so access and working-from-home disruption are priced honestly.
Cheap headline pricing is only useful when the exclusions, paperwork, and finish standard stay explicit. Push these risks into writing before you shortlist anyone.
No mention of certification, test results, or competent person scheme registration.
A price that excludes fault tracing yet claims to cover all remedial electrical work.
Reluctance to confirm circuit loading, isolation time, or consumer unit suitability.
Vague promises to 'sort the paperwork later' after completion.
Use these service-specific planning routes to pressure-test the scope before you ask electrician providers for final numbers.
Consumer Unit Replacement
Upgrade legacy fuse boards to safer modern consumer units with improved protection and compliance.
House Rewiring
Deliver partial or full rewiring for outdated electrical systems with safer distribution and future capacity.
Electrical Inspection
Carry out targeted electrical inspection and fault-risk reporting before purchase, rental, or planned upgrades.
Explore local cost context before requesting quotes.
Signs include old rubber or lead-sheathed cables, frequent tripping of the consumer unit, discoloured sockets or switches, a lack of RCD protection, or a fuse board older than 25 years. An electrician can carry out an EICR (Electrical Installation Condition Report) to assess the condition.
Part P refers to the section of Building Regulations covering electrical safety in dwellings. A Part P registered electrician is qualified to self-certify their work as compliant, saving you the cost of a separate building control inspection.
A typical home EV charger installation costs £800–£1,500 including the unit and installation. Costs vary depending on the charger brand, cable run length, and whether your consumer unit needs upgrading.
Yes, for notifiable work such as new circuits, work in bathrooms or kitchens, and consumer unit replacements. A Part P registered electrician can self-certify compliance, avoiding a separate building control application.
Compare nearby categories before choosing your final quote shortlist.