Electrician in Crawley
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Typical price: £55–£920
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Electrician prices in Crawley
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Socket or switch replacement Like-for-like swap on existing wiring | £55 | £90 | £170 |
| Light fixture installation Replace or fit new fixture on existing circuit | £55 | £110 | £200 |
| Consumer unit replacement New board with RCBO protection incl. certification | £410 | £600 | £920 |
| EICR inspection Condition report for a 3-bed house | £140 | £180 | £280 |
How to hire a electrician pro in United Kingdom
- For notifiable work (new circuits, consumer unit changes, work in bathrooms), use an electrician registered with a competent person scheme — NICEIC, NAPIT, or ELECSA — so the work self-certifies under Part P of the Building Regulations
- Ask for an Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC) or Minor Works Certificate on completion — don't pay the balance without it
- Get the hourly rate or day rate agreed up front (typically £45-£60/hr, day rate ~£350-£450)
- For bigger jobs, get 2-3 quotes on Checkatrade or MyBuilder with identical scope (points, chasing, making good)
- For house purchases or older homes, commission an EICR (Electrical Installation Condition Report)
- Confirm public liability insurance
In England and Wales, Part P of the Building Regulations makes certain domestic electrical work notifiable — it must be done by an electrician registered with a competent person scheme (NICEIC, NAPIT) or inspected by building control. Landlords must hold a valid EICR (renewed at least every 5 years) for rented homes.
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Frequently asked questions
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.
What is a panel or consumer unit upgrade, and when do I need one?
The panel (consumer unit, fuse board, DB board) distributes power to your circuits. Upgrades are needed when it uses obsolete fuses, lacks modern safety devices (RCD/GFCI/RCBO protection), trips constantly, or can't support new loads like an EV charger or induction range. It is regulated work in most countries and usually requires certification or inspection — budget for a licensed pro, never DIY.
How much does it cost to replace a light fixture or ceiling fan?
A straightforward swap on an existing, sound circuit is typically a minimum-charge visit of under an hour. Costs rise when the fixture is heavy (needs a rated box or bracing), ceilings are high (ladder or scaffold work), or the existing wiring turns out to be degraded. Buying the fixture yourself and paying labour-only is normal and usually cheapest.
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.
What counts as an electrical emergency?
Burning smells from outlets or the panel, sparking, buzzing from the consumer unit, repeated breaker trips you can't isolate, and any exposed live wiring — switch off the affected circuit (or the main switch) and call an emergency electrician. A single dead outlet or a tripped breaker that resets and holds is a next-business-day job at standard rates.
How much does an electrician cost in the UK?
Hourly rates typically run £45-£60 (average around £50), with day rates of £350-£450. Emergency call-outs run £80-£100+ per hour. London and the South East price 20-40% above the national average.
What is an EICR and when do I need one?
An Electrical Installation Condition Report is a formal inspection of your wiring, typically £150-£300 for a house. Landlords in England legally need one at least every 5 years; buyers should get one on any home older than 25 years or with signs of DIY wiring. It grades defects C1 (danger) to C3 (improvement recommended).
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