How to Quote for Electrical Work in the USA: Rates, Templates and Tips

A professional electrical quote does more than name a price – it protects you legally, sets customer expectations, and signals that you’re a different class of operator from the unlicensed competition. Here is how to write electrical quotes that win jobs and hold up if there’s a dispute.


What Every Electrical Quote Must Include

  1. Your state electrical contractor license number – required on all electrical quotes in most states
  2. Your general liability and workers comp insurance details
  3. Detailed scope – circuit-by-circuit for large jobs; fixture/outlet counts for service work
  4. Permit note – “This quote includes/excludes required permits” (never assume)
  5. Materials specification – brand and grade where relevant (e.g., “Square D Homeline 200A panel, not builder-grade”)
  6. Timeline – start date, anticipated completion
  7. Payment terms – deposit + balance on completion
  8. Change order clause – “Work beyond this scope requires a signed change order at [$X/hr]”

Electrical Job Pricing Reference USA (2026)

Job Typical Price Range
Single outlet installation $150-$300
GFCI outlet replacement $100-$200
Light fixture replacement $100-$250
Ceiling fan installation $150-$350
200A panel upgrade $1,500-$4,000
EV charger install (Level 2) $400-$1,200
Whole-home rewire (1,500 sqft) $8,000-$15,000
Smoke detector replacement (set) $200-$400

Permits: Always Clarify

Electrical permits are required for most work beyond basic device replacement in every US jurisdiction. Who pulls the permit – you or the homeowner – must be clearly stated in the quote. As the licensed contractor, you should typically pull it (and include the fee), as this protects both parties and ensures proper inspection.




Ex-tax total
Quote this price
Your take

Free calculator by CoreQuote — the quoting app for trades

Free Electrician Quote Template (US) — PDF
Print-ready A4 template with labour, materials and $VAT breakdown. Fill in and send.
Download free PDF

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I include permit fees in my electrical quotes?
Yes – include them as a line item. Customers appreciate transparency and it avoids the awkward conversation later. Budget $75-$300 for a typical residential permit depending on jurisdiction.

How do I quote a job where I won’t know the full scope until I open the walls?
Quote a fixed price for what you know, and include a clear T&M (time and materials) clause for unknowns: “Unknown conditions including knob-and-tube, aluminum wiring, or undersized subpanel will be quoted separately once discovered.”


CoreQuote helps US electricians quote quickly and professionally from their phone. Try free for 6 months at kwowta.com.

Want to quote faster? CoreQuote is a free quoting app built for US contractors — professional quotes in seconds, digital customer sign-off, and instant invoice conversion. Try it free today.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *