You wire smart homes. Your website is from the flip-phone era.
Homeowners are searching for EV charger installs, panel upgrades, and whole-home generators — high-ticket projects they research before calling. If your site is a single dated page with a list of services, you're losing that work to the contractor who looks like they belong in the same decade as the job.
Electrical work has quietly become big-ticket: EV chargers, 200-amp panel upgrades for electrified homes, standby generators after every hurricane season. The customers for that work do real research, compare two or three contractors, and judge hard on the website — because they can't judge the wiring.
Most electrician sites still read like a Yellow Pages ad: a list of services, a photo of a van, a form. The contractor who explains the project, shows the certifications, and answers the cost question first is the one who gets the site visit.
The four ways electrician websites lose money
We've audited hundreds of electrical contractor sites. The same problems show up over and over — and every one of them costs you a customer who was ready to pay.
Nothing about EV chargers or generators
The highest-intent, highest-ticket searches in your trade — and your website doesn't have a page for either. Google sends those customers to someone who does.
Trust signals missing
License number, insurance, master electrician status — buried or absent. For a trade where a bad hire burns the house down, customers screen for trust ruthlessly.
No project photos
Clean panel work and tidy conduit are your portfolio. A site with no photos of finished work reads like a contractor with no finished work.
A form instead of a phone
Half of electrical work is urgent — dead outlets, burning smells, tripped panels. A contact form that promises a response 'within 48 hours' is a referral to your competitor.
The vibe we'd build for a electrical contractor
Electrical work is invisible when it's done right — so the site has to make competence visible. Near-black, arc-flash cyan, license numbers treated like trophies.
Built for how a electrical contractor actually wins work
Electrical customers split into 'scared and urgent' and 'researching a big project.' Your site has to be credible to both in the first screen.
Project pages that sell
EV chargers, panel upgrades, generators, remodels — each gets a page with process, timeline, and ballpark pricing guidance.
License front and center
Your license number, insurance, and certifications displayed where both Google and nervous homeowners look first.
Real work, photographed
A portfolio of clean installs. We organize the photos you already have on your phone into proof that closes.
Emergency path
Tap-to-call for the urgent stuff, with after-hours expectations stated plainly.
Ballpark cost answers
Pages that answer 'what does a panel upgrade cost' honestly with ranges — the question every customer Googles first.
Service-area pages
Rank in every city you serve, not just where the shop is.
Old site gone, new site live, in 7 days.
Audit & quote
60-minute call. We tell you exactly what's broken and lock a fixed price before you hang up.
Design + copy + SEO
You watch the real site take shape in the browser. We write the copy and wire the schema.
You review, we polish
One round of revisions, applied the same day. No tickets. No project-manager relay.
Launch — you keep the keys
Your domain, your hosting, your code. No platform lock-in, no retainer, no hostage situation.
Electricians websites, built market by market
Everything happens over a call and a shared screen — no office visit, no markup for geography. These are the markets we focus on:
Before you call
Should I list prices for electrical work on my site?
Ranges, yes — exact prices, no. 'Panel upgrades typically run $2,500–$4,500 depending on amperage and condition' filters out tire-kickers, builds trust, and matches the question people actually search. Contractors who refuse to discuss cost online lose the lead to the one who answers it.
I'm a one-truck operation. Is a real website overkill?
A one-truck operation is exactly who benefits most. You can't outspend the big shops on ads, but a fast site with strong service pages and real reviews can out-rank them organically — and it works while you're up a ladder. It's the only employee that costs you once.
Can you write the content? I don't have time.
Yes — we write everything. We pull what we need from a 60-minute call and your existing materials, draft every page, and you review it. Most electricians spend under two hours total on their entire rebuild.
What does it cost, exactly?
Three fixed packages: $1,500 for a 5-page rebuild in 7 days, $5,000 for up to 20 pages with a blog and integrations in 14 days, and $15,000+ for 100+ page builds. The quote we send before you sign is the number on the final invoice — no scope-creep charges, ever.
Ready to bulldoze your electrical contractor's website?
Tell us your domain. We'll send a brutal audit of what's broken, with a fixed quote to fix it. No sales call required.