Electrician in North Shore
Compare local registered electrician (sparkie) pros in North Shore and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: NZ$80–NZ$3,000
Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.
Electrician prices in North Shore
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Socket or switch replacement Swap on existing wiring | NZ$80 | NZ$150 | NZ$280 |
| Light fixture install Replace or fit new fixture | NZ$100 | NZ$180 | NZ$350 |
| Switchboard upgrade Modern board with RCD protection incl. CoC | NZ$800 | NZ$1,500 | NZ$3,000 |
| EV charger installation Dedicated circuit + charger install, excl. unit | NZ$700 | NZ$1,200 | NZ$2,400 |
How to hire a electrician pro in New Zealand
- Verify registration with the Electrical Workers Registration Board (EWRB) — most electrical work legally requires a registered, licensed electrical worker
- Ask for a Certificate of Compliance (CoC) or Electrical Safety Certificate on completion — required for prescribed work
- Get the call-out fee and hourly rate confirmed before booking
- For bigger jobs, get 2-3 quotes via Builderscrack or direct with identical scope
- Confirm insurance and workmanship warranty
- For older homes, ask about the state of the switchboard and earthing before adding new loads
New Zealand restricts most electrical work to EWRB-registered electrical workers, and prescribed work must be certified with a Certificate of Compliance. Limited homeowner DIY is legal in your own home (e.g. replacing switches on existing wiring) but is narrower than people assume and the work must still meet the rules.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives electrician prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
Are cheap electricians worth the risk?
Electrical is the wrong trade to shop on price alone: bad work hides inside walls, can void insurance, and is a fire risk that surfaces years later. A sane approach: verify the licence/registration first (non-negotiable), then compare 2-3 licensed quotes and choose on communication and scope clarity rather than the lowest number.
What should I prepare before the electrician arrives?
Clear access to the panel/consumer unit and the work areas, list every symptom (which outlets, when, what trips), and note the age of the property and any known previous electrical work. If you rent, get the landlord's approval first — in most countries electrical modifications are the landlord's call and often their cost.
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 long do common electrical jobs take?
Socket or switch replacement: 30 minutes. New light fixture: 30-60 minutes. New circuit to an appliance: 2-4 hours. Consumer unit/panel upgrade: half a day to a day. EV charger install: half a day. Full rewire of a 3-bedroom home: 3-10 days. Anything involving certification adds paperwork time — ask for the certificate before final payment.
Do I need an electrical safety inspection when buying a house?
Strongly recommended anywhere, and formalised in some countries (periodic inspection reports, compliance certificates at sale). An inspection typically costs a few hours of labour and reveals dangerous DIY history, degraded insulation, missing earthing, and undersized panels — exactly the defects that are expensive to discover after moving in. Use the report as a negotiation item.
How much does an electrician cost in New Zealand?
Hourly rates typically run $80-$130 plus a call-out/vehicle charge of $50-$100. Auckland and Wellington sit at the top of the range. Emergency after-hours work runs roughly 1.5-2x standard rates.
Can I do any electrical work myself in New Zealand?
A narrow band of DIY is legal in your own home — like-for-like replacement of switches, sockets, and light fittings on existing low-risk circuits — but new circuits, switchboard work, and anything in damp areas requires a registered electrician, and prescribed work needs certification. When selling, uncertified work becomes your problem.
Free, no obligation. Sign in with Google to send your request.
How Handld works
- 1
Tell us what you need
Describe the job and where you are. It takes about a minute.
- 2
We match your request
Your request goes to local professionals who cover your area and service.
- 3
Compare quotes and choose
Pros reply with quotes. Compare, ask questions and hire on your terms — free for you.