Electrical Tips and FAQ for Newcastle Homeowners

Practical answers to the questions we hear most often.

Energy Saving Tips

  • Switch every light in your home to LED. It is the single fastest way to reduce your electric bill with no lifestyle change required.
  • Install occupancy sensors or smart dimmers in rooms you do not use constantly. Hallways, laundry rooms, and bathrooms are great candidates.
  • Unplug chargers, TVs, and gaming consoles when not in use. Many devices draw power even in standby mode.
  • Seal air gaps around electrical outlets on exterior walls. Cold drafts through outlet boxes are more common than most homeowners realize.

Electrical Maintenance

  • Test your GFCI outlets monthly by pressing the test and reset buttons. A GFCI that does not trip or reset needs to be replaced.
  • Have your electrical panel visually inspected every 10 years, especially if your home is older or you have added significant load.
  • Replace any outlet that feels warm to the touch, sparks, or does not hold a plug firmly. These are signs of wear that should not be ignored.
  • Check your smoke and carbon monoxide detectors every six months and replace batteries annually.

Wiring Warning Signs

  • Lights that flicker when you run an appliance usually mean an overloaded circuit or a loose connection. Both are worth having looked at.
  • If your breaker trips repeatedly on the same circuit, do not just reset it. That is the breaker doing its job. Something is drawing too much current.
  • Burning smells, discolored outlets, or outlets that feel warm are immediate warning signs. Stop using them and call an electrician.
  • Knob-and-tube or aluminum branch circuit wiring in older homes may need assessment before adding new load or renovating.

When to Call an Electrician

  • Any time you are adding a new circuit, outlet, or hardwired appliance, the work should always be done by a licensed electrician with a permit.
  • Before finishing a basement, converting a garage, or adding an ADU. The electrical rough-in needs to be done right before walls close.
  • If your home still has a fuse box instead of a breaker panel, or if your panel is Federal Pacific or Zinsco brand, get it assessed soon.
  • When buying a home, a pre-purchase electrical inspection can surface problems the general inspector may have missed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Electrical costs vary depending on the job. Simple repairs like replacing an outlet or switch typically run $100–$250. Ceiling fan installation is usually $150–$300. A panel upgrade to 200 amp service in Newcastle generally runs $2,500–$4,500 depending on the scope of work. EV charger installation is typically $500–$1,200 including the permit. We provide free estimates so you know the number before any work begins.
In King County, a permit is required for most electrical work beyond simple like-for-like replacements. This includes new circuits, panel upgrades, service changes, EV charger installation, subpanel installation, and any wiring work in new construction or additions. We handle permit pulling and inspection scheduling as part of our process. You do not need to chase the county yourself.
Common signs include breakers that trip frequently, a panel that feels warm or makes buzzing sounds, lights that dim when appliances run, or a 100-amp panel in a home with modern electrical demands. You will also need an upgrade before adding an EV charger or heat pump in most cases. If your home is more than 30 years old and the panel has never been replaced, it is worth having it assessed.
A GFCI (Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter) outlet shuts off power instantly if it detects an imbalance in current, which can happen when electricity finds a path through water or a person. Current electrical code requires GFCI protection in kitchens, bathrooms, garages, outdoors, unfinished basements, and near any sink. Older homes often lack them in all the required locations, which is a code violation and a safety issue.
Knob-and-tube wiring was the standard from roughly 1880 through the 1940s. It is not automatically dangerous if it is in good condition and has not been modified, but it presents real risks in older Newcastle homes. It has no ground wire, it cannot support modern electrical loads, and it is often damaged or improperly spliced over decades of DIY work. Most home insurance carriers will not cover homes with active knob-and-tube wiring. We can assess what you have and give you honest options.
Most Level 2 EV charger installations take between two and four hours once we are on-site. If your panel needs to be upgraded first, that adds time and a separate visit. We assess your panel capacity before scheduling the install so there are no surprises. We also handle the permit and inspection, which typically adds a week or two to the overall timeline but does not require any additional effort on your part.

Still have questions?

Give us a call at 425-210-4791 or send a message and we will get you an answer.
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Quick tips

  • Switch to LED bulbs throughout your home.
  • Test GFCI outlets monthly.
  • Never ignore a repeatedly tripping breaker.
  • Seal outlet gaps on exterior walls.
  • Have your panel inspected every 10 years.
  • A Level 2 charger is far more efficient than a standard outlet for EVs.

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