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You’re not buying peace of mind from a brochure. You’re getting a licensed electrician who opens your panel, checks your wiring, tests your circuits, and tells you what’s actually wrong.
Most homes in Gerritsen Beach weren’t built for how you live now. The bungalows that got winterized in the 50s and 60s? They have wiring that predates grounded outlets. The houses near the water? Moisture does things to electrical systems that you won’t see until something stops working—or starts sparking.
A home electrical inspection in Gerritsen Beach gives you documentation. It gives you a plan. And if you’re buying, selling, or just trying to sleep better at night, it gives you answers you can actually use.
We’re a Brooklyn-based electrical contractor. We’re licensed, insured, and we’ve been inside enough Gerritsen Beach homes to know what we’re looking at when we open your panel.
We’re not the cheapest option. We’re the one that shows up on time, explains what we found in plain language, and doesn’t try to sell you work you don’t need. Our electrical inspection services in Gerritsen Beach are thorough because we know what insurance companies, buyers, and the Department of Buildings actually care about.
You’ll get a written report. You’ll get photos. And if something needs fixing, we’ll tell you why it matters and what it costs—no pressure, no runaround.
We start at your electrical panel. That’s where most problems show up first—undersized breakers, double-tapped circuits, aluminum wiring, rust from moisture exposure. If your home was built before 1990, there’s a good chance your panel is working harder than it was designed to.
From there, we check your outlets, test your GFCI protection, inspect visible wiring, and look for code violations that could flag during a sale or refinance. We’re also checking your grounding system, your service entry, and whether your circuit breaker setup matches your actual electrical load.
The whole process takes a couple of hours. You don’t need to leave. We’ll walk you through what we’re seeing as we go, and when we’re done, you’ll have a full report that breaks down what’s safe, what’s not, and what should be on your radar in the next few years.
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An electrical wiring inspection in Gerritsen Beach covers your entire system—not just the parts you can see. We’re looking at your main service panel, subpanels if you have them, branch circuit wiring, grounding and bonding, GFCI and AFCI protection, outlet condition and placement, and whether your system meets current NYC electrical code.
Gerritsen Beach has specific challenges. Homes near the water deal with salt air and humidity that corrode connections. Older homes have knob-and-tube wiring or aluminum wiring that insurance companies won’t cover. And because this neighborhood has so many owner-occupied homes, people tend to DIY things that should’ve been permitted.
A circuit breaker inspection in Gerritsen Beach also means checking for overloaded circuits, improper wire gauges, missing junction box covers, and outdated panels that can’t handle modern appliances. If you’ve got a 100-amp panel and you’re running central air, a washer and dryer, and a couple of window units, you’re pushing it. We’ll tell you if you’re close to the edge.
Most homeowners pay between $150 and $400 for a full house electrical inspection in Gerritsen Beach. The price depends on the size of your home, how old it is, and whether you need a detailed report for a real estate transaction or just a safety check.
If you’re buying or selling, expect to be closer to the higher end. That inspection includes a written report with photos, code compliance notes, and a breakdown of any issues that could affect your sale or insurance coverage.
If you just want someone to look at your panel and tell you if it’s safe, that’s usually on the lower end. Either way, you’re paying for a licensed electrician’s time and expertise—not a handyman with a voltage tester.
We inspect your main electrical panel and any subpanels, test all accessible outlets and switches, check your grounding system, verify GFCI protection in kitchens and bathrooms, inspect visible wiring for damage or code violations, and evaluate whether your system can handle your current electrical load.
In Gerritsen Beach, we also pay close attention to moisture damage, especially in homes near the water. Corroded connections, rust inside the panel, and improperly sealed exterior outlets are common. We’ll also flag outdated wiring types like knob-and-tube or aluminum that could affect your insurance or resale value.
You’ll get a written report that lists everything we found, explains what’s urgent and what’s not, and gives you a clear picture of your home’s electrical health. If you’re working with a real estate agent or insurance company, this report is what they’ll want to see.
You don’t legally need one unless you’re doing permitted work or your insurance company asks for it. But if your home is more than 30 years old, you should probably get one anyway.
Electrical systems degrade. Connections loosen. Breakers wear out. And if your home was built or renovated before modern code requirements, there’s a decent chance something isn’t up to current standards. That doesn’t always mean it’s dangerous, but it does mean you’re rolling the dice.
An electrical code inspection in Gerritsen Beach gives you a baseline. You’ll know if your panel needs an upgrade, if your wiring is a fire risk, or if you’re one blown breaker away from a bigger problem. Most people wait until something stops working. This is the thing you do before that happens.
Undersized electrical panels are the big one. Most older homes in Gerritsen Beach have 100-amp service, which was fine in 1960 but doesn’t cut it now. You’re running more appliances, more electronics, and higher loads than the system was designed for.
We also see a lot of missing GFCI protection, especially in older kitchens and bathrooms. NYC code requires it, and it’s one of the first things that gets flagged during a sale. Aluminum wiring is another common issue—it was used in the 60s and 70s, and it’s a known fire hazard if it wasn’t installed correctly.
Moisture damage is specific to this area. Homes close to the water deal with corrosion inside panels, rusted breaker connections, and improperly sealed outdoor outlets. And then there’s the DIY work—ungrounded outlets, missing junction boxes, wires spliced with electrical tape. That stuff adds up.
Plan on two to three hours for a full inspection. That includes time to open and inspect your panel, test outlets and circuits throughout the house, check your grounding system, and document everything for the report.
If your home is larger, has multiple subpanels, or we find issues that need a closer look, it might take a little longer. We’re not rushing through it. This isn’t a checklist job—it’s a real evaluation of your electrical system.
You don’t need to leave while we work, and most people prefer to stick around so we can walk them through what we’re finding. If you’ve got questions about your wiring, your panel, or whether something is safe, that’s the time to ask. We’ll give you straight answers.
Yes. A lot of insurance companies won’t cover homes with knob-and-tube wiring, aluminum wiring, or outdated panels—at least not without an inspection or an upgrade. If you’re getting dropped or facing a rate hike, a certified electrical inspection in Gerritsen Beach can show your insurer that your system is safe and up to code.
In some cases, they’ll accept the inspection and keep your coverage as-is. In others, they’ll require you to fix specific issues before they’ll renew. Either way, you need documentation from a licensed electrician, not just a home inspector’s notes.
If you’re buying a home and the inspector flags electrical issues, your insurance company will probably ask for a follow-up before they’ll issue a policy. We can do that inspection, provide the report, and if needed, handle the repairs so you’re covered from day one.
Other Services we provide in Gerritsen Beach