Hear from Our Customers
Your breaker panel stops tripping every time you run the AC and microwave at the same time. Your electronics survive the next storm without getting fried by a power surge. Your generator kicks on automatically when the grid goes down, keeping your refrigerator running and your family comfortable.
That’s what happens when your electrical system actually works the way it should. No more resetting breakers in the middle of summer. No more wondering if that flickering light is about to become a bigger problem. No more calling around for quotes only to get hit with overtime charges you never agreed to.
You get a licensed electrician in Haslet, TX who shows up when promised, explains what’s wrong in plain English, and gives you a written price before touching a single wire. The work gets done right the first time, backed by a warranty, so you’re not dealing with the same issue six months later.
We’ve been handling electrical work in the Dallas-Fort Worth area since before Haslet’s population boom brought all those new developments off Highway 114. We’re not a franchise with a call center in another state. We’re a family-owned electrical contractor based right here in Fort Worth, and we’ve seen every kind of electrical issue that comes with North Texas living.
We know what happens to older homes in this area when you try to add a Level 2 EV charger without upgrading the panel first. We know how Texas storms and grid instability wreak havoc on sensitive electronics. And we know that when your power goes out at 9 PM on a Saturday, you don’t want to wait until Monday morning for someone to call you back.
Our A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau and multiple Super Service Awards from Angie’s List didn’t come from smooth talk. They came from showing up, doing the work right, and charging exactly what we said we would.
You call or submit a request online, and we schedule a time that actually works for your schedule. No four-hour windows where you’re stuck waiting around. When our electrician arrives, they assess the situation and explain what’s going on in terms that make sense—not a bunch of code numbers and technical jargon designed to confuse you.
Before any work starts, you get a written estimate. Flat rate. No surprises. No “overtime fees” that magically appear because the job ran past 5 PM. You approve the price, and we get to work.
Our electricians are licensed by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation and carry full liability insurance. That matters more than most people realize until something goes wrong. When the work is done, we test everything to make sure it’s functioning properly, clean up, and walk you through what we did. You get a warranty on the work, and if you have questions later, you can actually reach someone who knows your job.
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Electrical repairs cover everything from outlets that stopped working to breakers that won’t stop tripping. We handle flickering lights, faulty wiring in older Haslet homes, and GFCI outlets that need replacing. If something electrical isn’t working right, we find out why and fix it.
Panel upgrades are big in this area because most homes built before 2010 have 100-amp or 150-amp panels that can’t handle modern electrical loads. You add a few smart devices, a second fridge in the garage, maybe an EV charger, and suddenly you’re maxing out your system. We upgrade panels to 200-amp service so your home can handle today’s demands without constantly tripping breakers.
Whole-house surge protection is critical in Texas. Between summer storms and grid instability, power surges happen more often here than almost anywhere else in the country. One surge can destroy your HVAC control board, your TV, your computer—anything with a circuit board. We install surge protection at the panel level to stop that damage before it happens.
Backup generator installation means you’re not sitting in the dark when the power goes out. We handle the whole process: permits, gas line connections, automatic transfer switches, and startup. When the grid drops, your generator kicks on within seconds, and you don’t even notice except for the hum outside.
Panel upgrades in Haslet typically run between $2,500 and $4,500 depending on whether you’re going from 100-amp to 200-amp service, how far your panel is from the meter, and whether we need to upgrade the service line from the street. That price includes the new panel, breakers, labor, permits, and inspection.
If your home was built before 2000, there’s a good chance you’ll need an upgrade before you can safely add major appliances or an EV charger. Most older panels in this area weren’t designed to handle the electrical load that modern homes require. We assess your current system, calculate your actual load requirements, and give you a written estimate before any work starts.
The upgrade itself usually takes one full day. Your power will be off for a few hours while we swap the panel, but we coordinate with Oncor to minimize downtime. Once it’s done, you’ll have enough capacity to run everything you need without worrying about tripping breakers every time the AC cycles on.
Yes, and here’s why. Texas has some of the worst conditions for power surges in the country. You’ve got severe thunderstorms from spring through fall, an aging power grid that’s prone to fluctuations, and voltage spikes every time Oncor switches load during peak demand. Studies show that 60-80% of surges actually come from inside your home—every time your AC compressor kicks on or your refrigerator cycles, it creates a small surge that degrades electronics over time.
Whole-house surge protection installs at your main panel and stops surges before they reach your outlets. It’s different from those power strips you plug your computer into—those only protect one device and they wear out without you knowing it. A whole-house system protects everything: your HVAC system, your appliances, your smart home devices, all your electronics.
The cost is usually between $400 and $800 installed, depending on the level of protection you need. Compare that to replacing a $6,000 HVAC control board or a $2,000 TV, and it pays for itself the first time it stops a major surge. We install systems rated for the kind of surge activity common in North Texas, and they come with warranties that cover connected equipment if a surge gets through.
We offer 24-hour emergency electrical service in Haslet, TX and the surrounding areas. When you call with an emergency—sparking outlets, burning smells, complete power loss, or anything that’s a safety hazard—we prioritize getting someone to you as quickly as possible. Response times vary based on where our electricians are and what time you call, but we aim for same-day service on emergencies.
Here’s what counts as an emergency: anything that poses an immediate safety risk or leaves you without power. A breaker that won’t reset and killed power to your refrigerator overnight? That’s an emergency. A light switch that’s warm to the touch or making buzzing sounds? Also an emergency. An outlet that stopped working in your living room? That can usually wait until regular business hours.
We charge the same flat rate for emergency work that we charge during regular hours. No overtime fees. No trip charges that double because you called on a weekend. You get a price before we start, and that’s what you pay. Most emergency calls in Haslet involve panel issues, storm damage, or wiring problems in older homes that finally gave out.
Most homes in Haslet need between a 16kW and 22kW standby generator to cover essential circuits during an outage. That’s enough to run your HVAC system, refrigerator, lights, a few outlets, and your garage door opener. If you want to power your entire home without thinking about what’s running, you’re looking at a 22kW to 26kW unit.
The right size depends on your home’s square footage, how many AC units you have, and what you absolutely need to keep running during an outage. We calculate your actual load requirements before recommending a generator size. Undersizing means you’ll be manually shutting things off to avoid overloading the generator. Oversizing means you spent money on capacity you’ll never use.
Installation takes two to three days and includes running a gas line from your meter, installing an automatic transfer switch, setting up the generator pad, and connecting everything to your panel. We handle all the permits and coordinate the inspection with the city. Once it’s installed, the generator runs a self-test every week to make sure it’s ready when you need it. When the power goes out, it kicks on automatically within 10 seconds—you barely notice except for the sound outside.
Yes. Every electrician we send to your home is licensed by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation and carries full liability insurance. That’s not optional in this business—it’s the law. But plenty of handymen and unlicensed contractors do electrical work anyway, and homeowners don’t find out until something goes wrong and their insurance won’t cover the damage.
A licensed electrician has passed state exams, completed thousands of hours of training, and stays current on the National Electrical Code and local requirements. They know how to work safely, how to pull permits when required, and how to install systems that pass inspection. When you hire someone without a license, you’re gambling with your home’s safety and your insurance coverage.
Our insurance protects you if something gets damaged during the work. Our licensing means the work gets done to code. And our 25 years in business means we’re not disappearing after the job is done. You can verify our credentials before we start, and we’re happy to provide proof of insurance if you want it for your records. That’s standard practice for legitimate electrical contractors, and it should be non-negotiable when you’re hiring someone to work on your home’s electrical system.
Breakers trip for three main reasons: you’re overloading the circuit, there’s a short somewhere in the wiring, or the breaker itself is worn out. In older Haslet homes, it’s usually overload. You’re running too many things on one circuit, and the breaker is doing its job by shutting off before the wire overheats.
If your breaker trips every time you run the microwave and coffee maker at the same time, that’s overload. The solution is either redistributing your appliances to different circuits or adding a new circuit to handle the load. If the breaker trips randomly with nothing obvious causing it, you likely have a short in the wiring or a failing appliance. That requires tracking down the source, which means testing outlets and fixtures on that circuit until we find the problem.
Sometimes the breaker itself is just old. Breakers wear out after years of use, especially if they’ve tripped frequently. A worn breaker might trip under normal load or fail to trip when it should—both are safety issues. We test the breaker, check the circuit for problems, and determine whether you need a repair, a new breaker, or a panel upgrade. Most breaker issues in Haslet homes come down to outdated electrical systems trying to handle modern electrical demands they were never designed for.