Hear from Our Customers
Your breaker shouldn’t trip every time you run the microwave and AC together. Your lights shouldn’t flicker when a storm rolls through. And you definitely shouldn’t smell burning plastic coming from an outlet.
These aren’t minor annoyances. They’re warnings that your electrical system can’t handle what you’re asking it to do. Most homes in Denton County built before 2000 are running on panels designed for a different era—before electric vehicles, smart home systems, and the kind of summer heat that pushes your HVAC to its limit.
When your electrical system works the way it should, you don’t think about it. You plug things in. You flip switches. Everything just runs. That’s what proper electrical work gets you—reliability you forget about until you need it, and safety you can count on when the unexpected happens.
We’ve been handling electrical work in the Dallas-Fort Worth area since 1999. We’re family-owned, fully licensed, and we carry the insurance coverage Texas requires—$300,000 per occurrence, $600,000 aggregate.
Our A+ Better Business Bureau rating and multiple Super Service Awards from Angie’s List didn’t come from marketing. They came from showing up on time, explaining what’s wrong in plain language, and fixing it right the first time. We’re not the cheapest option in Denton County, and that’s intentional. You’re paying for licensed electricians who pull proper permits, use commercial-grade components, and guarantee their work with real warranties on parts and labor.
The electrical problems you’re dealing with in Denton County aren’t new to us. We’ve been fixing them for over two decades.
You call or submit a request online. We ask a few questions about what’s going on—not to waste your time, but so we show up with the right equipment and parts already in the truck.
We schedule a time that works for you. Our electricians arrive in fully stocked service vehicles, which means most repairs get completed during the first visit. No waiting days for a part to come in.
Before we touch anything, we give you a clear estimate. You know what the work costs before we start. If we find something else that needs attention, we explain it, price it separately, and let you decide. Once you approve, we get to work. Our licensed electricians handle everything from troubleshooting the issue to testing the repair and cleaning up after ourselves.
When we’re done, your electrical system works the way it should. And if something goes wrong with our work, our warranty covers it—no arguing, no fine print.
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Electrical panel upgrades are one of the most common jobs we handle in Denton County. If your home was built before 1990 and you’re adding an EV charger or upgrading your HVAC, your panel probably can’t handle the load. We install panels that meet current code requirements and give you room to grow.
Whole-house surge protection matters here. North Texas gets hammered with lightning strikes and power grid fluctuations that can fry electronics in seconds. We install surge protection systems that guard your entire home—not just the devices plugged into power strips.
Emergency electrical services run 24/7 because electrical problems don’t wait for business hours. Sparking outlets, burning smells, or complete power loss need immediate attention. Our emergency response team typically reaches Denton County locations within 60 to 90 minutes.
Wiring installation and home rewiring services cover everything from adding outlets in your garage to completely rewiring older homes that still have aluminum wiring or outdated cloth-insulated cables. We also handle outdoor electrical work, ceiling fan installations, recessed lighting design, EV charging station installation, and electrical troubleshooting when you know something’s wrong but can’t pinpoint what.
Every job includes a licensed Master Electrician overseeing the work, proper permits pulled with the city, and UL-listed parts that last decades longer than standard residential materials.
Panel upgrades in Denton County typically run between $2,000 and $4,500, depending on the amperage you need and whether we’re replacing the panel in the same location or relocating it to meet current code.
Most homes built in the last 30 years have 100-amp or 150-amp panels. If you’re adding central AC, an EV charger, or a backup generator, you’ll likely need to upgrade to a 200-amp panel. The work includes pulling permits, installing the new panel, updating the grounding system if needed, and having the city inspect everything before we close it up.
The price also depends on how many circuits you’re running. If you’re rewiring parts of the house at the same time, that adds to the total. We give you an upfront estimate before starting any work, so you know exactly what you’re paying for.
Power strips only protect the devices plugged into them. They do nothing for your HVAC system, refrigerator, water heater, garage door opener, or anything else hardwired into your electrical system.
Whole-house surge protection installs at your electrical panel and protects every circuit in your home. When lightning strikes nearby or the power grid sends a voltage spike through the lines—which happens more often than you’d think in North Texas—the surge protector diverts that excess electricity safely to ground before it reaches your equipment.
Replacing a fried AC compressor costs thousands of dollars. Whole-house surge protection costs a few hundred and takes about an hour to install. It’s one of those things you don’t appreciate until the house next door gets hit by lightning and your stuff still works.
Flickering lights, outlets that feel warm to the touch, breakers that trip frequently, or a burning smell near outlets or switches are all signs your wiring needs attention. So is aluminum wiring, which was common in homes built between 1965 and 1973 and has a higher risk of overheating at connection points.
If your home still has a fuse box instead of a breaker panel, or if you’re using extension cords as permanent solutions because you don’t have enough outlets, your electrical system isn’t keeping up with your needs. Homes built before 1990 often lack the grounding systems required by modern code, which means you’re not protected against electrical shocks or surges.
The only way to know for sure is to have a licensed electrician inspect your system. We check the panel, test outlets, look at how circuits are loaded, and identify anything that’s outdated or unsafe. Then we explain what needs to be fixed now versus what can wait.
Texas law requires anyone doing electrical work for hire to hold a valid electrical license issued by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. Licensed electricians have completed thousands of hours of training, passed state exams, and maintain insurance coverage to protect you if something goes wrong.
Handymen aren’t licensed to do electrical work beyond basic tasks like changing light fixtures. If they’re running new circuits, upgrading panels, or troubleshooting wiring issues, they’re breaking the law—and your homeowner’s insurance won’t cover damage caused by unlicensed work.
Licensed electrical contractors like us also pull permits for work that requires inspection. That means the city verifies everything meets code before it’s closed up. If you ever sell your home, unpermitted electrical work can kill a deal or force you to rip it out and redo it properly. Hiring a licensed electrician costs more upfront, but it protects you from expensive problems down the road.
Most EV charger installations take four to eight hours, depending on how far your electrical panel is from where you’re parking and whether your panel has capacity for the additional load. Level 2 chargers—the kind most people install at home—require a 240-volt circuit, similar to what an electric dryer uses.
If your panel is in the garage and we’re mounting the charger on the same wall, installation is straightforward. If the panel is on the opposite side of the house, we’ll need to run conduit and wiring to reach the charger location, which adds time and cost.
Before we install anything, we check your panel’s capacity. If you’re already maxing out a 100-amp or 150-amp panel, you’ll need an upgrade before adding an EV charger. We handle the entire process—panel upgrade if needed, running the circuit, mounting the charger, and testing everything to make sure it works safely.
Check your electrical panel first. If a main breaker tripped, you can try resetting it by flipping it all the way off and then back on. If it trips again immediately, you’ve got a short circuit or overloaded system that needs professional attention—don’t keep resetting it.
If the main breaker is on and you still don’t have power, the problem is likely between the meter and the panel, or with the utility connection itself. That’s not something you should touch. Call your utility company first to rule out an issue on their end, then call a licensed electrician if they confirm the problem is inside your system.
If you smell burning plastic, see sparks, or notice scorch marks near the panel, don’t touch anything. Leave the house and call an emergency electrician immediately. Electrical fires can start inside walls where you can’t see them, and they spread fast.