Electrician in Sherwood Park
Compare local electrician pros in Sherwood Park and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: CA$90–CA$4,600
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Electrician prices in Sherwood Park
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outlet or switch replacement Swap on existing wiring | CA$90 | CA$170 | CA$290 |
| Light fixture or fan install Replace fixture on existing box | CA$110 | CA$200 | CA$370 |
| EV charger installation Level 2 charger on dedicated circuit, excl. unit | CA$550 | CA$1,100 | CA$2,200 |
| Panel upgrade 200A panel replacement incl. permit and inspection | CA$1,650 | CA$2,750 | CA$4,600 |
How to hire a electrician pro in Canada
- Verify provincial certification — electrician is a compulsory certified trade across Canada (Red Seal endorsement is portable between provinces)
- In Ontario, confirm the contractor holds an ECRA/ESA licence; electrical work requires an ESA permit and inspection
- In other provinces, check the equivalent authority (Technical Safety BC, etc.) and permit requirements
- Confirm liability insurance and provincial workers' compensation
- Get the service call fee and hourly rate in writing (typically $80-$150/hr)
- For panel upgrades or EV chargers, get 2-3 quotes and ask about utility or provincial rebates
Electrical work in Canada is tightly regulated: electricians must hold provincial certification, and most provinces require permits and inspection for installation work (e.g. ESA in Ontario, Technical Safety BC). Knob-and-tube and aluminum wiring in older homes are common insurance flashpoints requiring documented remediation.
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See the full breakdown of what drives electrician prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
Why do electricians charge a call-out fee?
The fee covers travel and the first block of time on site, and it protects the electrician against 30-minute jobs that consume half a morning with travel. It is standard in most markets. Ask whether it includes the first hour and whether it is waived or credited if you proceed with quoted work.
Should I get multiple quotes for electrical work?
For anything beyond a minimum-charge visit, yes — two or three. Insist each quote covers the same scope: number of points, certification included, chasing and making good walls, and parts brands. The cheapest quote often excludes certification or wall repair; the comparison only means something on identical scope.
How much does an electrician cost?
Electricians charge an hourly rate plus, often, a call-out or service fee covering travel and the first period on site. Small jobs (replace a socket, install a light fixture) are usually a minimum-charge visit; bigger jobs like panel upgrades or rewiring are quoted fixed. Batch small jobs into one visit — the minimum charge dominates the cost of single small tasks.
How much does it cost to rewire a house?
Rewiring is priced per circuit or per property size and is one of the most invasive electrical jobs — walls are opened, and the house may be partly without power for days. Expect a multi-day job costing two to three orders of magnitude more than a service call. Get itemised quotes (per room or per point), and ask what wall-repair 'making good' is included, as that is where quotes diverge most.
How much does an EV charger installation cost?
A home EV charger install is typically half a day's work: mounting the unit, running a dedicated circuit from the panel, and adding protection devices. Total cost depends on the charger you buy, cable run distance, and whether your panel has spare capacity — a panel upgrade can double the project. In several countries this is notifiable/regulated work, and grants or utility rebates may apply — ask the installer.
How much does an electrician cost in Canada?
Billed rates typically run $80-$150 per hour with service call minimums of $100-$200. Toronto and Vancouver sit at the top. Panel upgrades run roughly $1,800-$5,000 including permit and inspection, with demand driven by EV chargers and heat pumps.
Will old wiring affect my home insurance in Canada?
Yes — insurers commonly ask about knob-and-tube or aluminum wiring and may require an inspection, remediation, or charge higher premiums. If you're buying an older home, price an electrical inspection and potential remediation into your offer; a documented ESA/provincial inspection satisfies most insurers.
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