Top Emergency Electricians in Fleming Island, FL, 32003 | Compare & Call

There are 234 electrician companies server in Fleming Island FL

Progress One

Progress One

1131 W 5th St, Jacksonville FL 32209
Electricians

Progress One Electrical Services, serving Jacksonville, FL, provides reliable and professional electrical solutions tailored to our community's needs. We are Progress Electric, LLC, a team committed t...

Quality Electrical

Quality Electrical

2679 W Beaver St, Jacksonville FL 32254
Electricians, Drywall Installation & Repair, General Contractors

At Quality Electrical in Jacksonville, FL, we provide comprehensive electrical, drywall, and general contracting services for both homes and businesses. Our team is fully licensed and insured, bringin...

Nationwide Electric

Nationwide Electric

★★☆☆☆ 2.3 / 5 (3)
1633 Farm Way Ste 501, Middleburg FL 32068
Electricians

Nationwide Electric has been the trusted electrical expert for Middleburg and the greater Jacksonville area since 1997. With hundreds of satisfied customers, they specialize in protecting local homes ...

Current Electrical Contractors

Current Electrical Contractors

6000 Philips Hwy Ste 5, Jacksonville FL 32216
Electricians

Current Electrical Contractors is a licensed electrical contractor established in 2008, proudly serving Jacksonville and the surrounding area. Owned and operated by a Florida native, our company is bu...

Electrical Training Alliance of Jacksonville

Electrical Training Alliance of Jacksonville

4951 Richard St, Jacksonville FL 32207
Electricians

The Electrical Training Alliance of Jacksonville is a five-year apprenticeship program designed to build the next generation of skilled electricians for the Jacksonville area. Affiliated with the Inte...

G Henry Electric

G Henry Electric

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (9)
1332 Sunset Blvd, Daytona Beach FL 32117
Electricians, Generator Installation/Repair, Solar Installation

G Henry Electric brings a wealth of practical experience to Daytona Beach. Our founder completed a rigorous five-year apprenticeship in Central Florida before spending five years as a journeyman elect...

JL Electric

JL Electric

Jacksonville FL 32210
Electricians

JL Electric is a trusted, locally-owned electrical contractor serving Jacksonville and the surrounding communities. We specialize in comprehensive electrical inspections, a critical service for a coas...

Regency Electric Company

Regency Electric Company

6440 Southpoint Parkway Ste 300, Jacksonville FL 32216
Electricians

Regency Electric Company has been a trusted electrical contractor in Jacksonville, FL since 1979. As a privately held company, we specialize in commercial electrical services with design-build capabil...

Blake Family Enterprise

Blake Family Enterprise

Jacksonville FL 32255
Electricians

Blake Family Enterprise is a Jacksonville-based, family-owned electrical and home services company dedicated to serving the local community. We combine a personal touch with professional expertise, sp...

Voltz Electric

Voltz Electric

★☆☆☆☆ 1.0 / 5 (2)
11630 Columbia Park Dr E Unit 2, Jacksonville FL 32258
Electricians, Lighting Fixtures & Equipment, Generator Installation/Repair

Voltz Electric is a family-owned and operated electrical contractor proudly serving Jacksonville and Northeast Florida. Founded by a former Navy rescue swimmer and active firefighter with over a decad...



Estimated Electrical Service Costs in Fleming Island, FL

Emergency After-Hours CallEstimated Range
$234 - $319
Electrical Safety InspectionEstimated Range
$104 - $144
EV Charger InstallationEstimated Range
$689 - $924
Panel Upgrade (200 Amp)Estimated Range
$2,329 - $3,109
Ceiling Fan InstallationEstimated Range
$204 - $279

Methodology: Estimates are dynamically generated using labor multipliers derived from 2025 BLS OEWS (SOC 47-2111) data for Fleming Island. Prices include standard parts and labor adjusted for 2026 economic projections.

Questions and Answers

Why do my lights flicker during thunderstorms, and is Clay Electric Cooperative's power damaging my new smart home gadgets?

Flickering during storms is directly related to our high lightning surge risk on the Clay Electric grid. These voltage spikes and dips are hard on all electronics, but especially modern smart home devices with sensitive microprocessors. A whole-house surge protector installed at your main panel is a critical first defense. For comprehensive protection, we recommend a layered approach that includes point-of-use suppressors for expensive AV equipment and ensuring your home's grounding electrode system is fully up to code to safely dissipate that energy.

I have no power and smell something burning near my panel. How fast can an electrician get to my house in Eagle Harbor?

For an emergency like a burning smell, our priority is immediate dispatch. From a start point like the Fleming Island Library, we can typically be on site within 10 minutes using US-17. The first step is to safely shut off the main breaker at your service panel if you can do so without risk, then call. This kind of emergency often points to a failing breaker, loose connection at the bus bars, or a damaged wire, all of which require urgent professional diagnosis to prevent fire.

We live on the flat coastal plain near the library. Could the soil or environment be affecting our home's electrical grounding?

The flat, often moist soil of our coastal plain can actually provide good conductivity for your grounding electrodes, which is beneficial. However, consistent moisture can also accelerate corrosion on underground ground rods and clamps over a 25-year period. During a routine inspection, we would check for this and measure your system's grounding resistance. Proper grounding is your first line of defense, especially with our high lightning activity, so ensuring those connections are intact and up to NEC 2023 standards is important for safety.

I just found out I have a Challenger electrical panel. Is this an immediate danger, and can my 2001, 200-amp system handle adding an EV charger?

A Challenger panel is a known safety concern due to a history of recalled breakers that can fail to trip, creating a fire hazard. Your 200-amp service capacity from 2001 is technically sufficient for a Level 2 EV charger, but the panel itself must be evaluated and likely replaced first. Adding a high-demand circuit to a faulty panel is unsafe. We would assess the entire service entrance and grounding system to ensure it meets current NEC standards before any EV charger installation proceeds.

I want to upgrade my panel. What permits are needed from Clay County, and does the work have to follow the 2023 NEC?

Any service panel replacement or upgrade in Clay County requires an electrical permit from the Clay County Building Department, followed by a mandatory inspection. As of March 2026, all work must comply with the Florida-adopted NEC 2023 code, which includes requirements for AFCI and GFCI protection, surge protection devices for dwelling units, and specific rules for emergency disconnects. As a licensed Master Electrician regulated by the Florida DBPR, I handle securing the permit, ensuring code compliance, and scheduling the inspection to close the job out properly.

My power comes from an underground line. Does that make service or repairs more complicated or expensive?

Having an underground service lateral, common in Eagle Harbor subdivisions, generally provides more reliable day-to-day power with less storm-related outage risk from falling branches. If a fault occurs in the buried cable between the utility transformer and your meter, repair is the responsibility of Clay Electric Cooperative. For work on your side of the meter, the process is standard. We coordinate any necessary permits with the Clay County Building Department, but the underground feed itself doesn't typically complicate most in-home panel upgrades or circuit additions.

Our home was built in 2001 and the lights dim when the AC kicks on. Is our original wiring still safe for modern appliances?

With the system now 25 years old, it's common for original NM-B (Romex) wiring in Eagle Harbor to struggle under 2026 loads. While the insulation is likely intact, circuits from that era weren't designed for today's simultaneous high-draw devices like air fryers, gaming PCs, and multiple large-screen TVs. We often find the issue isn't the wiring itself but overloaded circuits and an outdated panel schedule that needs rebalancing or dedicated new lines to handle modern demand safely.

How can I prepare my home's electrical system for a summer brownout or a rare winter ice storm here?

For summer brownouts, which strain the grid during AC peak season, consider installing a generator with a proper transfer switch to maintain essential circuits. For winter preparedness, ensure heat tape circuits for pipes are on dedicated, GFCI-protected outlets. In both scenarios, protecting your electronics from the resulting voltage fluctuations is key. We recommend installing hardwired surge protection and scheduling a pre-season load calculation to identify which circuits are critical for backup power during an outage.

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