Buying an older home, or just not sure what's behind your walls? A licensed electrician walks your whole system — panel, outlets, grounding, GFCI/AFCI, and visible wiring — and tells you exactly what's safe and what isn't.
Most electrical problems stay invisible until something fails — a warm outlet, a breaker that won't reset, or worse. A home electrical safety inspection is a full visual and functional review of your system so you find issues on your terms, not in an emergency.
We look at the main panel and breakers, grounding and bonding, the condition of your outlets and switches, whether GFCI and AFCI protection is present and actually working, visible wiring, and any signs of overload or overheating. We also note smoke and CO detector coverage and flag obvious code or safety concerns.
You walk away with a clear, plain-language summary of what we found and a list of recommendations ranked by priority — plus a written quote for any repairs, with no pressure to book. Note: this is a private electrician's safety assessment, not a municipal or permit inspection.
A thorough walkthrough of the parts of your system that matter most for safety:
Homes 20+ years old often have aging panels, ungrounded outlets, or wiring that no longer meets today's standards.
Doing due diligence before you close? An electrician's read on the wiring is far more specific than a general home inspection.
Planning a kitchen, addition, or new circuits? Know your system's condition and capacity before the work starts.
Flickering lights, warm outlets, or breakers that trip? Get a clear, honest answer about whether your home is safe.
We review the main panel and breakers, grounding and bonding, the condition of outlets and switches, GFCI and AFCI presence and operation, visible wiring, signs of overload or overheating, smoke and CO detector presence, and any obvious code or safety issues. You get a clear walkthrough of findings and prioritized recommendations.
Most home inspections take about one to two hours depending on the size and age of the house and how accessible the panel, outlets, and attic or crawlspace are. Older homes with original wiring or added-on circuits can take a little longer because there is more to look at.
Yes — a dedicated electrical inspection is one of the smartest things a buyer can do on an older Tucson home. A general home inspector flags concerns, but a licensed electrician can actually tell you how serious they are and roughly what it would cost to fix, which is useful information during negotiation.
We explain what we found in plain language, rank issues by safety priority, and give you a written quote for any repairs. There is no pressure to book on the spot — the assessment is yours to use however you like, whether that is fixing things now or negotiating a purchase.
Schedule a licensed electrician's safety inspection and get a clear, prioritized report — with a written quote inside one business day.