Cost Guide
Electrician Cost Guide: 2026 Pricing
Electrical work pricing climbed across most of the country this year, with EV charger installs and panel upgrades making up a bigger share of the average pro's calendar. Here's where the typical residential job lands in 2026.
| Service | 2026 National Average |
|---|---|
| Service call / diagnostic | $100 to $200 |
| Hourly labor rate | $95 to $200 |
| Outlet replacement | $140 to $300 |
| GFCI outlet install | $175 to $375 |
| Light fixture install (basic) | $150 to $400 |
| Ceiling fan install | $200 to $500 |
| EV charger install (Level 2) | $900 to $2,800 |
| Sub-panel install | $1,200 to $2,500 |
| Electrical panel upgrade (200 amp) | $2,500 to $5,500 |
| Service mast / weatherhead replacement | $1,200 to $2,800 |
| Whole-home rewire (1,500 sqft) | $8,000 to $20,000 |
What changes the price
- Permit and inspection. Required for most panel and circuit work. A pro who skips them is cutting corners.
- Wall access. Fishing wire through finished walls takes longer than open framing. Drywall repair adds up.
- Code updates triggered. A panel upgrade can require AFCI or GFCI breakers on existing circuits in some jurisdictions.
- Distance from the panel. A 60-foot run to a garage EV charger costs more than 15 feet next to the panel.
- Existing wiring type. Knob-and-tube or aluminum branch wiring complicates almost every job.
- Utility coordination. Service upgrades that require the meter to be pulled add a day and a coordination fee.
Always get an itemized estimate that lists permits separately. Browse electricians in your state above to compare local pricing.
