Electrician's Apprentice Toolkit

Interactive tools for learning the electrical trade

Ohm's Law Calculator

Enter any two values to calculate the rest. This is the foundation of all electrical work.

V = I × R   |   P = V × I

📚 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

Score: 0 / 0   |   Streak: 0 🔥

📈 Electrician Career Path & Salary

Here's what your journey looks like from where you are now to running your own shop.

📝 Pennsylvania Licensing Roadmap

The big surprise: PA has no statewide electrician license.

Unlike NJ, NY, or most states, Pennsylvania doesn't issue a state electrician license. Licensing is handled at the municipal level (and many small towns have nothing), but you still need a few things to legally run a business and bid jobs. Here's the real path.

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:

PathLengthPay (Year 1)ProsCons
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)

OSHA 10
$60–100 online · required on most job sites
OSHA 30
$150–250 · for lead/supervisor roles
NFPA 70E
Arc flash safety · required for any commercial work
EPA 608
If you touch HVAC refrigerants

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.

What you need:
· $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:

CityLicenseRequirements
PhiladelphiaElectrical Contractor License (L&I)7 yrs experience OR 4 yrs as Journeyman + pass city exam + $50k bond + insurance
PittsburghMaster Electrician License5 yrs experience + pass exam + insurance
Allentown / BethlehemCity Electrical LicensePass NEC-based exam + insurance
Reading / Lancaster / EastonLocal registrationInsurance + HICPA usually sufficient
Hazleton / Wilkes-Barre / most boroughsNone city-wideHICPA + 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

Everything you actually need to start a PA electrical business.

23 items across 4 phases. Check things off as you finish them — your progress saves in this browser. Approximate total cost to get fully set up: $1,200–$2,500 (mostly insurance + initial LLC fees). Time: 2–6 weeks if you push.

0 of 23 complete ·

💰 Real Hourly Rate Calculator

What you actually need to charge to take home what you want.

New contractors lose money for years because they pick a rate that "sounds reasonable" instead of working backward from real numbers. Plug yours in — it'll tell you the floor below which you're literally working for free.

📊 Pennsylvania market context (2026)

Type of workHazleton / Scranton / Wilkes-BarrePhilly / 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-hours1.5–2× base1.5–2× base
Trip / diagnostic fee$75–125 (often applied to job)$95–175 (often applied to job)

📊 Typical solo-contractor overhead (PA, year 1)

ExpenseMonthlyAnnual
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

There are only 4 things that get you customers when nobody knows you exist.

Google Business Profile (free, dominates local search), reviews, response speed, and referrals. Everything else — Yelp ads, Angi leads, Facebook posts, door hangers — is a multiplier on top of those four. Don't skip to the multipliers before the base is built.

Phase 1 · Days 1–30 — Foundation

Set the stage

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.
[YOUR NAME] — Licensed Electrician serving [TOWN] HICPA #PA[######] · Fully Insured NEIGHBOR-FIRST PRICING: · Free 30-min estimate · $25 off your first service call · Same-week scheduling Outlets, panels, EV chargers, fans, lighting, generators, troubleshooting. Call/text: (XXX) XXX-XXXX · yourbiz.com

Phase 2 · Days 30–60 — Harvest

Turn jobs into proof

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

Start paying for leads (carefully)

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

Make customers bring you customers

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

RULE #1

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.

RULE #2

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.

RULE #3

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.

RULE #4

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

  1. Set up your Google Business Profile this week. Single highest-leverage move.
  2. Get to 25 Google reviews in your first 6 months. 25+ is the threshold where you start outranking established competitors with 3–5 reviews.
  3. Answer the phone (or text back within 30 min) every single time. Most of your competition won't.