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HomeCost GuidesElectrician Cost › Atlanta, GA

⚡ Cost Guide · Atlanta, GA

Average Electrician Cost in Atlanta, GA (2026)

A electrician in Atlanta charges $75/hour for a standard service call — that's 10% below the US median of $83/hour. The differential reflects the GA cost-of-living composite of 90.8 (US average = 100) applied to BLS OEWS national mean wage data for SOC 47-2111.

Electrician project costs in Atlanta, GA

ProjectTimeTypical costRange
Standard service call (diagnosis + minor repair) 1–2 hours $158 $129 – $189
Add a new outlet (15–20 amp, dedicated) 1–3 hours $182 $149 – $218
Ceiling fan install (existing wiring) 1–2 hours $173 $142 – $207
Panel upgrade (100A → 200A, includes permit) 1 day $1,748 $1,434 – $2,098
Level 2 EV charger install (50A circuit, hardwired) 4–6 hours $693 $568 – $831
Single room rewire (avg ~3 outlets + 1 fixture) 1 day $650 $533 – $779
Whole-house rewire (1500–2000 sq ft) 5–10 days $6,018 $4,935 – $7,222

Sources: BLS OEWS May 2024 (SOC 47-2111), MERIC State Cost of Living Index 90.8 for GA, NAHB Construction Cost Survey 2024.

How Atlanta compares

At an effective contractor rate of $75/hour, Atlanta sits meaningfully below the national median for electrician work. Homeowners here will see lower-than-average prices on labor-intensive jobs (re-pipes, panel upgrades, full system replacements) where labor is the bulk of the cost. Materials-heavy jobs (water-heater swaps, furnace replacements, large appliance installs) will track somewhat below the national figure because regional materials inflation in GA runs about 9% below the US benchmark.

What the work involves

A licensed electrician handles anything attached to the breaker panel or carrying line voltage (120V/240V). A standard residential service call begins with the panel: the electrician verifies the main breaker rating, looks for double-tapped breakers, checks for AFCI/GFCI compliance in the right rooms, and tests for proper grounding at the service drop. Outlet, switch, and fixture work is straightforward. Panel upgrades, sub-panel adds, EV-charger installs, and whole-house rewires require a permit, a load calculation (NEC Article 220), and an inspection by the local AHJ before the panel is energized.

Six questions to ask any electrician in GA

  1. What is your master or journeyman license number, and is it active in this state?
  2. Will the work be done by a licensed electrician or by a helper with the licensee on call?
  3. Are you pulling the permit and scheduling inspection?
  4. Does the quote include any required panel-load calculations or breaker upgrades?
  5. What's the warranty on labor — and on the equipment you're installing?
  6. Are AFCI and GFCI breakers included where code now requires them?
Cash-only quotes, "I can do it without a permit so it's cheaper," and any pressure to upsize a panel without a written load calculation explaining why.

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Seasonal electrical checklist

Spring

  • Test every GFCI outlet (kitchen, baths, garage, exterior) using the on-device test/reset button.
  • Test smoke and CO detectors; replace batteries on any unit older than 10 years.
  • Inspect outdoor lighting and replace bulbs and weatherproof gaskets that have degraded over winter.
  • Walk the panel: look for rust, scorch marks, or warm breakers — any of these is a service call.

Summer

  • Inspect the exterior service drop and the meter base for storm damage; never touch the wires yourself.
  • If you run multiple high-draw appliances (window AC, EV charger, pool pump), have an electrician verify your panel can handle the simultaneous load.

Fall

  • Test the whole-home surge protector (or have one installed before winter storms).
  • Inspect generator transfer switch and run the generator under load for 20 minutes.
  • Replace outdoor incandescent bulbs with LEDs before holiday-light season.
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