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ElectricalHome Services in Georgetown, TX: Local Guide for Homeowners

Electrician in Georgetown, TX

Last updated: April 2026

By Cole Reinhardt

Electrical repairs, panel work, and new circuits are safety-critical in Georgetown, TX homes. This guide covers when to call a licensed electrician, what a typical visit addresses, and how to compare written scopes before you approve work.

What this guide covers
  • Panel and breaker troubleshooting
  • Outlets, circuits, and lighting
  • EV and appliance circuit planning

We publish educational guides and a provider directory. We don’t take service requests or schedule jobs.

Residential electricians in Georgetown, Texas

Electrical work is the home-services category where shortcuts cost the most. A botched panel swap, an undersized 50A EV circuit, or a backfed generator can show up as nuisance trips and burned receptacles before it shows up as a slow-developing house fire. Texas is also one of the few states where general contractors and handymen routinely overlap with licensed work, which means the homeowner has to know what licensing looks like before they hire. This guide is the homeowner-side overview for Georgetown, TX residential electrical work, and pairs with our Best Electricians in Georgetown directory.

What licensed electrical work looks like in Texas

Texas regulates electricians through the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). The licenses that matter for residential work are Master Electrician (the license that is allowed to pull permits and supervise work), Journeyman Electrician (works under a master), and Apprentice (works under a journeyman or master). Verify the license number for the company — not the technician on the truck — at tdlr.texas.gov. The City of Georgetown also requires an electrical permit for any service-entrance work, panel replacement, EV charger circuit, generator interlock, or new branch circuit run; permits are pulled by the master electrician and trigger an inspection that the homeowner does not pay extra for.

Liability insurance and workers' compensation certificates should be available on request. A licensed electrician declining to provide either is the strongest signal to pick someone else.

Common electrical issues we see in Georgetown homes

  • Tripping breakers and dimming on large appliances. The most common cause is overloaded branch circuits in 1990s-era homes that were wired for fewer plug-in loads than today's households actually run. Sometimes the fix is a dedicated circuit; sometimes the panel itself is undersized.
  • Aluminum branch wiring in some 1965–1972 ranch homes near the Square. Aluminum-to-copper pigtail repairs at every device with COPALUM crimps are the safest correction; full rewires are the gold standard but rarely cost-justified unless the home is being remodeled.
  • EV charger circuits. Tesla, Rivian, and Ford EV adoption in Sun City and Wolf Ranch has accelerated since 2023. Most installs are 240V/40–48A on a 50–60A breaker with #6 copper or #4 aluminum from the panel to a hardwired wall connector. Load calculations matter — older 100A or 125A panels often cannot accept the additional continuous load without a service upgrade.
  • Whole-home and partial-home generators. The February 2021 winter storm permanently changed Williamson County demand for generators. Common installs are 14–26 kW Generac or Kohler running on natural gas (most central Georgetown) or large propane tanks (Sun City and rural-edge homes). Permitted, properly sized, and interlocked, they are very safe; the unpermitted "generator extension cord" workaround is how houses burn down.
  • AFCI / GFCI gaps. Homes built before 2008 often lack arc-fault protection on bedroom circuits and ground-fault protection in some kitchen / garage / outdoor receptacles. Updating these protection devices is inexpensive and reduces both shock and fire risk substantially.
  • Service-entrance upgrades. 100A and 125A panels in older homes are functionally undersized for a household running an EV, a heat pump, an induction range, and the rest of the load list. 200A is the modern baseline; 320A is occasionally appropriate for larger Sun City casitas or dual-EV households.

Local context by neighborhood

Sun City homes from the late 1990s and early 2000s now routinely need a panel breaker overhaul as the plastic load-side breakers age past their service life. Wolf Ranch and Santa Rita Ranch homes (post-2014) are typically built with 200A service and a generous breaker count, but the slab-on-grade construction means any branch-circuit run added later goes through the attic — quote prices that assume "open walls" never apply to occupied homes. Older central Georgetown homes near the Square sometimes have generations of additions wired by different hands; an experienced electrician will sketch the panel before any quote.

Realistic 2026 pricing in Georgetown

  • Service call / diagnostic: $89–$175 typical, sometimes credited toward the repair if work is approved that visit.
  • Single 240V EV charger circuit (within ~30 ft of panel, no panel upgrade): $750–$1,800 installed, plus the cost of the wall connector itself.
  • 200A service panel replacement (with new meter base, grounding, and permit): $3,200–$5,500 typical; more if the meter loop, mast, or service drop also need work.
  • Whole-home Generac/Kohler generator (14–26 kW, NG/LP, automatic transfer switch): $9,500–$18,000 turnkey, depending on size, fuel run, and electrical complexity.
  • Surge protector (whole-home, panel-mounted, Type 2): $350–$650 installed.

FAQ

Do I need a permit for residential electrical work in Georgetown?

For nearly any work beyond a simple device replacement — yes. Service changes, panel work, EV chargers, generator interlocks, and new branch circuits all require a City of Georgetown electrical permit pulled by the master electrician. The inspection that follows is the homeowner's protection, not a hassle.

Can the company that installed my panel still do warranty work?

Most panel manufacturers (Square D, Eaton, Siemens) carry a 10-year residential warranty on the breakers and bus, with the manufacturer remediating defects. The labor warranty is separate and depends on the installer. Ask before you sign so you know who to call in five years.

Should I be worried about an old fuse box?

Fuse boxes themselves are not unsafe if intact, but most are undersized (60A or 100A) for modern load and lack the AFCI/GFCI protection that breaker panels have offered since the 2000s. Panel replacement is the standard recommendation for any home that still has fuses.

Next step: Compare verified Georgetown electricians in the directory below, then request written scopes that include the make/model of the panel and breakers, conductor sizing, permit handling, and warranty terms.

Top Electricians Serving Georgetown TX

These listings are compiled from public business information for companies that serve Georgetown, TX. They are provided to help you compare options; confirm current licensing, insurance, pricing, and availability with any provider before hiring.

Top Providers Serving Georgetown

Local businesses from public listing data, sorted by rating (highest first), then by review count. Confirm licensing and availability before hiring.

Featured Providers

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Frequently Asked Questions

These answers summarize common questions we hear from homeowners in and around Georgetown, TX. Use them as a starting point, then confirm details with any professional you choose to work with.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do electrical upgrades require permits?
Many panel upgrades and new circuits require permits and inspection. A qualified electrician can explain what applies in your jurisdiction.
How should I compare electrician estimates?
Ask for a written scope, what materials are included, and how change orders are handled before work begins.
When should I call an electrician urgently in Georgetown, TX?
Burning smells from a panel, buzzing breakers, outlets that spark, tingling from appliances, or power loss affecting medical equipment warrant immediate attention. Turn off the affected circuit at the panel if you can do so safely and call a licensed electrician—don’t wait for “normal business hours” on fire-safety signals.
Why are panel upgrades common in older Georgetown neighborhoods?
Many homes were built before today’s EV chargers, heat-pump HVAC, and kitchen appliance loads. An undersized or recalled panel can’t safely carry added breakers. Georgetown Village and similar areas often see 100A→200A upgrades when remodels add amps; expect scope to include grounding, bonding, and permit inspections.
What does EV charger installation typically involve?
A dedicated circuit from the panel, appropriate wire gauge and breaker, GFCI protection where required, and sometimes a service upgrade if your load calculation is tight. Wall connector choice and Wi-Fi features matter less than correct ampacity and clean terminations—verify the electrician calculates load before promising same-day adds.
Should I DIY minor electrical fixes in Texas?
Texas law restricts electrical work to licensed professionals in many scenarios. Even “small” swaps can violate code on box fill, grounding, AFCI/GFCI protection, or aluminum-to-copper transitions. Mistakes here aren’t cosmetic—hire for anything beyond changing a known-good bulb or flipping a labeled breaker after an overload.

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