⚡ Ohm's Law Calculator
Enter any two values to calculate the rest. This is the foundation of all electrical work.
📚 Why Ohm's Law Matters
Every circuit you'll ever work on follows Ohm's Law. When you're sizing wire, picking breakers, or troubleshooting why a motor isn't running — you're using these relationships. A 20A breaker on a 120V circuit can handle 2,400 watts. Exceed that and the breaker trips to prevent fire. That's Ohm's Law protecting lives.
🔌 NEC Wire Size Calculator
Determines the correct wire gauge per NEC 310.16 based on amperage, distance, and material.
🔬 Interactive Circuit Simulator
Build series and parallel circuits. Watch how voltage and current distribute in real time.
🏠 Residential Load Calculator
Calculate total service load for a home per NEC Article 220. Determines if you need 100A, 150A, or 200A service.
Large Appliances (watts)
💰 Job Cost Estimator
Estimate material costs for common residential electrical work. Prices are approximate 2026 averages.
📖 NEC Quick Reference
Key code sections every apprentice needs to know.
🎨 Wire Color Code Guide
Standard wire colors in US residential and commercial electrical systems.
🎓 Electrical Apprentice Quiz
📈 Electrician Career Path & Salary
Here's what your journey looks like from where you are now to running your own shop.
📝 Pennsylvania Licensing Roadmap
Step 1 — Apprenticeship (4–5 years, paid)
You can't skip this. Even without a state license, every customer (and every general contractor) wants someone who's done the hours. Three legitimate paths in PA:
| Path | Length | Pay (Year 1) | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IBEW JATC (Union) Local 81 covers Hazleton/Scranton |
5 yrs, 8,000 OJT + 900 classroom hrs | ~$18–22/hr | Best training. Free schooling. Pension + healthcare. Strong commercial/industrial pipeline. | Competitive entry (interview + aptitude test). Long ramp. |
| IEC (Non-union) Independent Electrical Contractors |
4 yrs, 8,000 OJT + 576 classroom hrs | ~$15–19/hr | Easier to start. More residential/light commercial. | You pay for school (~$2k/yr). Lower benefits. |
| PA DOLI Registered Direct employer sponsorship |
4 yrs, 8,000 OJT + 576 classroom hrs | ~$14–18/hr | Get hired direct by an existing shop, learn their way of doing things. | Quality varies wildly by employer. No guaranteed wage scale. |
💡 Move: Apply to IBEW Local 81 first (best deal). If you don't get in this cycle, take an IEC slot now and re-apply next year — the IBEW values prior trade experience.
Step 2 — Certifications that matter (do these early)
Step 3 — HICPA registration (mandatory at $5k+)
PA's Home Improvement Consumer Protection Act requires every contractor doing $5,000+ of residential work per year to register with the PA Attorney General. Without this, your contracts aren't enforceable and you can be fined $1,000+ per violation.
· $50 fee, renews every 2 years
· $50,000 personal injury + $50,000 property damage insurance (or $50k combined single limit)
· Your HICPA # (PA######) must appear on every contract, ad, business card, truck wrap, and website
· Register at: hicsearch.attorneygeneral.gov
Step 4 — Municipal license check
Even though there's no state license, some PA cities require their own. If you'll work in any of these, you need their license in addition to HICPA:
| City | License | Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Philadelphia | Electrical Contractor License (L&I) | 7 yrs experience OR 4 yrs as Journeyman + pass city exam + $50k bond + insurance |
| Pittsburgh | Master Electrician License | 5 yrs experience + pass exam + insurance |
| Allentown / Bethlehem | City Electrical License | Pass NEC-based exam + insurance |
| Reading / Lancaster / Easton | Local registration | Insurance + HICPA usually sufficient |
| Hazleton / Wilkes-Barre / most boroughs | None city-wide | HICPA + permits through local code office or 3rd-party inspector (e.g. Middle Department Inspection Agency) |
💡 If you stay in Hazleton/Luzerne County: HICPA + insurance is your entire regulatory burden. That's it. You can be legally bidding jobs the week after your apprenticeship ends.
Step 5 — Form the business
Once Steps 1–4 are clear, the actual business formation is the easiest part. Switch to the Business Setup tab → full checklist with PA-specific links.
✅ Why PA is actually easier than NJ or NY
NJ requires a state contractor license, $1M liability, $1k surety bond, and a Board of Examiners exam. NY varies by county but most require business licenses, insurance, and exams. PA has none of that for most of the state. Lower barrier to entry = you can be running paid jobs faster, but it also means customers will judge you on reputation alone, not credentials. Make your portfolio, photos, and reviews bulletproof.
✅ Business Setup Checklist
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💰 Real Hourly Rate Calculator
📊 Pennsylvania market context (2026)
| Type of work | Hazleton / Scranton / Wilkes-Barre | Philly / Pittsburgh metro |
|---|---|---|
| Residential service call | $80–130/hr | $120–175/hr |
| Residential project (rewires, panel upgrades) | $95–145/hr equivalent | $135–200/hr equivalent |
| Commercial | $95–160/hr | $135–220/hr |
| EV charger install (flat rate) | $800–1,400 | $1,100–2,000 |
| Emergency / after-hours | 1.5–2× base | 1.5–2× base |
| Trip / diagnostic fee | $75–125 (often applied to job) | $95–175 (often applied to job) |
📊 Typical solo-contractor overhead (PA, year 1)
| Expense | Monthly | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Work truck payment + insurance + fuel | $900–1,400 | $10,800–16,800 |
| General liability insurance ($1M) | $120–180 | $1,400–2,200 |
| Tool replacement & new purchases | $150–300 | $1,800–3,600 |
| Phone, software (QuickBooks, scheduling) | $100–200 | $1,200–2,400 |
| Accountant / quarterly taxes prep | $100–200 | $1,200–2,400 |
| HICPA renewal / continuing ed / misc | $30–50 | $360–600 |
| Realistic baseline | $1,400–2,330 | $16,760–28,000 |
💡 Use ~$22k as a default in the calculator above. Goes up fast if you hire an apprentice (+$50k–65k/yr fully loaded) or buy a second truck.
🚀 First 100 Customers Playbook
Phase 1 · Days 1–30 — Foundation
The week-one moves
- Google Business Profile — free. Takes 20 min to set up at business.google.com. This single thing is responsible for >60% of local service business leads. Verify with the postcard, upload 10+ photos, set service area to ~25 mi radius.
- Nextdoor account — sign up as a local business. Post a single intro: who you are, what you do, that you grew up in [town], and a $25-off-first-job offer.
- 3–5 friends-and-family jobs at break-even. The goal is not money — it's photos and reviews. Do small jobs (ceiling fan, outlet, switch replacement). Every job: before photo, in-progress photo, after photo, and a polite review ask.
- Door hangers in 100 nearby houses. Print 200 at VistaPrint for ~$80. Hang them on a Saturday morning. Use the template below.
Phase 2 · Days 30–60 — Harvest
Review-harvesting system
- Text-the-review-link the moment payment clears. Don't email — text. Don't ask — send the direct Google review link with one sentence: "If you have 30 seconds, this means the world to me as a new business." Conversion rate on text: ~40%. On email: ~5%.
- Photo portfolio — build a folder of before/afters. Upload 2–3 to GBP after every job. Google rewards active profiles in local rank.
- Yelp profile — free claim, but don't pay for ads yet. Yelp leads cost $20–60 each and Google is doing the heavy lifting at this stage.
- Facebook business page — 30-min setup, post the before/afters, join your town's "[Town] Community" or "Buy Nothing [Town]" Facebook groups.
Phase 3 · Days 60–90 — Scale
Paid acquisition tradeoffs
- Angi / Thumbtack — you'll get bombarded with sales calls. Test one for 30 days max with a $300 cap. Track every lead: cost per lead vs cost per booked job. If you're not closing ≥25%, drop it. Most new electricians lose money on these.
- Local Service Ads (Google) — "Google Guaranteed" badge, pay-per-lead. Usually better ROI than Angi/Thumbtack but requires background check + license proof.
- Geo SEO — make sure your GBP, website, and Yelp all say "Electrician in [Town], PA" identically. Build 5–10 simple service pages on your site (EV charger install, panel upgrade, etc.) targeting "[service] [town]" search.
- Local FB groups — answer free electrical questions in your town's groups. Don't pitch — just be helpful. People will DM you for paid work.
Phase 4 · Days 90+ — Compound
Referral & retention
- Referral incentive — $25–50 off the referrer's next service when a referred customer books. Tell every customer at checkout: "If you know anyone who needs work, send them my way and I'll knock $40 off your next visit."
- Seasonal nudges — once you have 50+ past customers, text them once a quarter: spring (surge protectors before storm season), summer (AC circuit checks), fall (generator tune-ups), winter (holiday lighting safety). Two-line texts, no marketing fluff.
- GC subcontract work — reach out to 5 local general contractors and remodelers. Offer reliable, fast, sub-rate work. Lower margin per hour but steady volume that fills your calendar when residential is slow.
- Maintenance contracts — small commercial clients (restaurants, retail, offices) often want a $150–300/mo "on-call electrician" arrangement. Recurring revenue smooths cash flow.
The rules nobody breaks
Respond within 1 hour or you lose the job.
Customer behavior data: ~80% of service requests go to whoever responds first. If you can't pick up, have a canned text auto-reply: "Got your message, I'm on a job — will call you back within 30 min." Keep your phone in your pocket, not in the truck.
Show up exactly when you said you would.
"Between 10 and 2" is a 4-hour window that costs the customer a vacation day. "I'll be there at 10:15" is a promise. If you'll be late: text by 9:45 with a new ETA. This single behavior puts you ahead of 70% of competitors.
Before / after photos. Every. Single. Job.
Free marketing material. Free portfolio. Proof for disputes. Upload to GBP weekly. Build an Instagram if you have time — #electrician posts get strong reach in trade communities.
Pick a diagnostic fee structure and stick to it.
Two options that work: (1) Free 30-min estimate — you eat the gas, customer commits zero, you close ~30%. Good when you're brand new. (2) $99 diagnostic fee, applied to job if booked — filters out tire-kickers, you close ~70%. Switch from #1 to #2 once your calendar is 50%+ booked.
✅ If you do nothing else, do these three things
- Set up your Google Business Profile this week. Single highest-leverage move.
- Get to 25 Google reviews in your first 6 months. 25+ is the threshold where you start outranking established competitors with 3–5 reviews.
- Answer the phone (or text back within 30 min) every single time. Most of your competition won't.