Hear from Our Customers
You stop worrying every time a storm rolls through North Texas. Your air conditioning runs alongside kitchen appliances without tripping breakers. Outlets stay cool to the touch, lights don’t flicker when you turn on the dryer, and you’re not resetting panels in the middle of summer heat.
That’s what proper residential electrical services in Krum, TX should deliver. Not just a temporary fix, but a system that handles modern electrical demands without putting your family at risk or destroying your electronics during the next power surge.
Most homes in Krum weren’t built for today’s electrical load. Between central air, home offices, kitchen appliances, and charging stations, older panels and wiring simply can’t keep up. When your system gets upgraded correctly, you gain capacity, safety, and the kind of reliability that lets you stop thinking about your electrical system entirely.
We’ve been handling home electrical repair and installation services across the Dallas-Fort Worth area since before Krum’s population boom. We’ve seen what happens when homes built in the ’80s and ’90s try to handle 2025 electrical demands, and we know exactly how to bring those systems up to code without tearing apart your walls.
Our team holds an A+ Better Business Bureau rating and multiple Super Service Awards because we show up when we say we will and we fix problems correctly. Every electrician on our crew is licensed, bonded, and insured, which matters more than most homeowners realize until something goes wrong.
We’re a family-owned operation, which means you’re not getting a different crew every time or dealing with a call center three states away. When you call about electrical troubleshooting for homes in Krum, TX, you’re talking to people who understand North Texas weather, local building codes, and what it takes to keep your system running through July heat and January ice storms.
First, we listen. You tell us what’s happening—breakers tripping, outlets getting warm, lights flickering, whatever’s going on. We schedule a time that works for you, and we actually show up when we say we will.
When we arrive, we assess your entire electrical system, not just the obvious problem. Sometimes a tripping breaker means you need a panel upgrade. Sometimes it’s a loose connection. We test, inspect, and figure out what’s actually wrong before we touch anything.
Then we explain what we found in plain language. No jargon, no upselling, just honest information about what needs to happen and why. You get upfront pricing before we start any work, so there’s no surprise invoice at the end.
Once you approve, we handle the repair or installation using quality materials like Square D circuit breakers and Southwire copper wiring. We test everything when we’re done, clean up completely, and make sure you understand what we did. You get documentation of the work and a clear warranty, because we stand behind what we install.
Ready to get started?
Every residential electrical service in Krum, TX that we handle includes a full system assessment. We’re not just fixing the one outlet you called about—we’re making sure your entire electrical system is safe and up to current code requirements.
Panel upgrades are one of our most common jobs in Krum because so many homes still have 100-amp or 150-amp panels trying to handle 200-amp demands. Modern homes need more power, and trying to run everything through an undersized panel is both dangerous and frustrating. We install panels that meet today’s National Electrical Code requirements, including the surge protection that’s now mandatory for all service upgrades.
Speaking of surge protection, North Texas storms produce an average of 100 power surges per month in your home. Most people don’t realize their electronics are getting damaged slowly over time until something major fails. Whole-house surge protection defends everything from your HVAC system to your laptop, and it’s one of the smartest investments you can make.
We also handle home wiring installation for additions, kitchen remodels, outdoor lighting, EV charger hookups, and generator connections. If it involves electricity in your home, we’ve done it hundreds of times and we know how to do it right.
If you’re constantly resetting tripped breakers, especially when running your air conditioning and kitchen appliances at the same time, your panel can’t safely handle your electrical load. That’s the most obvious sign.
Other indicators include a panel that’s warm to the touch, rust or corrosion inside the box, breakers that won’t reset properly, or a burning smell near your electrical panel. If your home was built before 2000 and still has its original panel, there’s a good chance it’s undersized for modern electrical demands.
Many older Krum homes have 100-amp or 150-amp panels, but today’s homes typically need 200-amp service to safely handle central air, kitchen appliances, home offices, and charging stations. The 2020 National Electrical Code also requires surge protection on all new panel installations, which most older systems don’t have. We can assess your current system and tell you exactly what you need—not what we want to sell you, but what will actually keep your home safe and functional.
Power strips only protect whatever’s plugged into them, and they’re designed for small surges from inside your home. Whole-house surge protection installs at your electrical panel and defends your entire home against major surges from lightning strikes, power grid fluctuations, and utility company issues.
Here’s what most people don’t realize: your home experiences an estimated 100 surges per month. Most are small, but they add up over time and slowly damage electronics, appliances, and your HVAC system. A single lightning strike near your home can send thousands of volts through your electrical system, destroying everything from your refrigerator to your Wi-Fi router in seconds.
Whole-house surge protection catches those big hits before they reach your devices. It’s now required by code for all residential service upgrades and new installations in Texas, which tells you how important it is. The cost of installing surge protection is a fraction of what you’d spend replacing a fried HVAC system, and it protects everything in your home simultaneously—not just what you remembered to plug into a power strip.
Most residential panel upgrades in Krum, TX take between four and eight hours, depending on what we’re replacing and whether we need to upgrade your service line. Your power will be off during the installation, so plan accordingly.
We typically start in the morning, disconnect your old panel, install the new one with proper surge protection, reconnect all your circuits, and test everything before we leave. If your home needs a service upgrade from 100-amp to 200-amp, that involves coordinating with your utility company and may add time to the project.
The actual timeline depends on a few factors: the age of your home, the condition of your existing wiring, whether your main service line needs upgrading, and how many circuits we’re moving to the new panel. We’ll give you an accurate time estimate after we assess your specific situation. What we won’t do is rush the job to save an hour—electrical work done wrong is dangerous, and we’d rather take the time to do it correctly than leave you with a system that fails inspection or causes problems down the road.
Yes. If you’re dealing with sparking outlets, burning smells, or any electrical issue that poses an immediate safety risk, we provide emergency service for Krum homeowners.
Electrical emergencies don’t wait for business hours, and some problems can’t wait until morning. If you smell burning near an outlet or panel, see sparks, or experience a complete power loss that’s not related to a utility outage, those situations need immediate attention.
We prioritize true emergencies—situations where there’s a real safety risk to your family or property. For non-emergency issues like a single tripped breaker or an outlet that stopped working, we can usually schedule you for the next business day. But if something feels dangerous or you’re genuinely concerned about fire risk, don’t wait. We’d rather check it out at 10 PM and find out it’s minor than have you ignore a serious problem because you didn’t want to bother anyone after hours.
First, verify they’re actually licensed, bonded, and insured. Texas requires electrical contractors to hold proper licenses, but not everyone follows the rules. Ask for their license number and check it with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.
Second, look for a track record you can verify. Better Business Bureau ratings, Super Service Awards, and actual customer reviews tell you more than a slick website. You want an electrician who’s been serving your area long enough to have a reputation—good or bad.
Third, pay attention to how they communicate. Do they explain what’s wrong in language you can understand, or do they hide behind jargon? Do they give you upfront pricing, or do they dodge the cost question until the work is done? A good electrician treats your home like their own and respects your time and budget. They show up when promised, clean up after themselves, and stand behind their work with a real warranty. If someone can’t do those basic things, it doesn’t matter how cheap their quote is—you’ll pay more in the long run fixing their mistakes.
Yes, we handle EV charger installations throughout Krum and can assess whether your current electrical system can support the additional load. Most EV chargers require a dedicated 240-volt circuit, similar to what your dryer or oven uses.
The first step is determining if your electrical panel has capacity for the charger. If you’re already maxing out a 100-amp or 150-amp panel, adding an EV charger might require a panel upgrade to safely handle the load. We’ll assess your current system, calculate your total electrical demand, and tell you exactly what’s needed.
Installation involves running a dedicated circuit from your panel to your garage or wherever you’re parking, installing the appropriate outlet or hardwired charger, and ensuring everything meets National Electrical Code requirements. Most installations take half a day once we have the right equipment and your panel is ready. We’ll also help you understand charging speeds and what level charger makes sense for your vehicle and driving habits, because there’s no point installing a Level 2 charger if your panel can’t support it or if a standard outlet would meet your actual needs.