Create professional electrician quotes in minutes. Define scope, set rates, and get client approval before starting work.
An electrician quote is a formal estimate issued to a client before work begins. It sets out the scope, deliverables, rates, and terms so both parties agree on what will be done and at what cost. A well-written quote protects both sides: the client knows what they are paying for, and the electrician has a documented basis for the work and invoice that follows. Once accepted, the quote typically converts into a confirmed booking or contract, and later into an invoice when the work is complete.
| Service | Typical Rate | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Electrical Labor | $85 - $150 | per hour |
| Service Call / Diagnostic Fee | $75 - $150 | per visit |
| Panel Upgrade (200 amp) | $1,500 - $3,500 | per job |
| Outlet or Switch Installation | $150 - $350 | per outlet |
| Wire, Breakers, and Conduit | cost + 15-20% | per job |
| Electrical Permit | $100 - $500 | per permit |
Before sending an electrician quote, have a clear conversation with the client about what they need, any constraints, and their budget. Break the work into specific deliverables so the quote is easy to understand and hard to dispute later. Attach a validity period (14 or 30 days is standard) so stale quotes do not turn into unexpected commitments. If the scope is uncertain, either quote a fixed scope with change-order pricing, or use a day rate with a ceiling. Clarify what the quote does not cover: materials, third-party fees, rush surcharges. Ask for written acceptance before starting work. For larger projects, request a deposit (typically 25 to 50 percent) to lock in the schedule. When work is complete, convert the accepted quote into an invoice so the numbers match and the audit trail is clean.