Top Emergency Electricians in Heavener, OK, 74937 | Compare & Call

There are 119 electrician companies server in Heavener OK

JG Electric

JG Electric

Tahlequah OK 74464
Electricians, Lighting Fixtures & Equipment

JG Electric provides reliable electrical services to homes and businesses in Tahlequah, OK. We specialize in circuit breaker and electrical panel installation and repair, wiring, lighting fixtures, an...

Ur and Son Electric

Ur and Son Electric

Muskogee OK 74403
Electricians

Ur and Son Electric, serving Muskogee homeowners, is built on a foundation of experience and integrity. Gary, a licensed Oklahoma contractor since the 1980s, spent decades as a journeyman electrician ...

Urquiza Group

Urquiza Group

Broken Arrow OK 74014
General Contractors, Damage Restoration, Electricians

Urquiza Group is a trusted, locally-owned general contractor serving Broken Arrow and the surrounding area. We combine comprehensive construction expertise with specialized electrical and damage resto...

Catale Electric Company

Catale Electric Company

★★☆☆☆ 2.3 / 5 (3)
Claremore OK 74017
Electricians

Catale Electric Company is a trusted, family-operated electrical contractor serving Claremore and Northeast Oklahoma. Founded by second-generation electricians Josh and Kim Welch, who grew up learning...

Brent Electric

Brent Electric

4120 Webb St, Pryor OK 74361
Electricians

Founded in 1996, Brent Electric has been a trusted electrical contractor serving Pryor and the Greater Tulsa area for decades. We specialize in providing comprehensive electrical services for industri...

TL Davis Electric & Design

TL Davis Electric & Design

Claremore OK 74019
Electricians, Lighting Fixtures & Equipment

TLDavis Electric & Design, LLC, founded in 2016, is a Claremore-based electrical contractor led by Master Electrician Terry Davis. With over 28 years in the field, Terry brings a wealth of experience ...

Garcia Electric

Garcia Electric

Cleveland OK 74020
Electricians

Garcia Electric, Inc. has been a trusted electrical service provider in the Tulsa and Cleveland, OK area for over three decades. Our experienced team is equipped to handle a comprehensive range of ele...

Electrical Services

Electrical Services

3212 W 530 Rd, Pryor OK 74361
Electricians

Electrical Services, Inc. has been a trusted electrical contractor in Pryor, Oklahoma, since 1979. As a family-owned business with fourteen licensed electricians, we specialize in the design, installa...

Tody's Electric

Tody's Electric

★★★☆☆ 3.0 / 5 (2)
3801 E Smith Ferry Rd, Muskogee OK 74403
Electricians

Tody's Electric is your trusted, locally-owned electrical contractor serving Muskogee and the surrounding area. We specialize in comprehensive electrical inspections and diagnostics to identify and so...

B & R Electric

B & R Electric

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (1)
2001 E Hancock St, Muskogee OK 74403
General Contractors, Electricians

B & R Electric is a trusted local electrical contractor serving Muskogee, Oklahoma, and the surrounding areas. We specialize in comprehensive electrical inspections and system upgrades designed to add...



Estimated Electrical Service Costs in Heavener, OK

Emergency After-Hours CallEstimated Range
$249 - $339
Electrical Safety InspectionEstimated Range
$109 - $154
EV Charger InstallationEstimated Range
$739 - $989
Panel Upgrade (200 Amp)Estimated Range
$2,494 - $3,334
Ceiling Fan InstallationEstimated Range
$219 - $299

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

FAQs

My power goes out more often than my neighbor's with underground lines. Is it because I have an overhead service mast?

Yes, overhead service lines are more exposed. In Downtown Heavener, your mast and the utility lines feeding it are susceptible to wind, ice, and even tree contact that underground services avoid. While the utility owns the lines up to your mast, the mast itself and the connection point are your responsibility. We often find older masts are rusted, loose, or no longer up to current wind and ice load codes, which can be the point of failure during a storm.

We live near the Runestone Park in the foothills. Could the rocky soil be causing my grounding problems?

Absolutely. The rocky, often shallow soil in the Ouachita Mountains foothills makes establishing a low-resistance grounding electrode system challenging. The National Electrical Code requires grounding electrodes to be in contact with the earth, and rock can prevent proper rod driving or create poor contact. We often need to use specialized techniques, like driving rods at an angle or using multiple, longer rods to find conductive soil, ensuring your home's safety system actually works during a fault or lightning strike.

I have an old 100-amp panel and want to install a Level 2 EV charger and a heat pump. Is my current setup safe for this in a 1970s house?

With a 100-amp service from the 1970s, adding both a heat pump and an EV charger is not just difficult—it's unsafe without a service upgrade. A Level 2 charger alone can draw 40-50 amps, nearly half your home's total capacity. More critically, many panels from that era, especially Federal Pacific brands, are known failure hazards and may contain recalled components. We must first replace that panel with a modern, code-compliant one and almost certainly upgrade your service entrance to 200 amps to handle the new loads safely.

My lights in this Downtown Heavener home dim when the AC kicks on. The house was built around 1970—is the wiring just worn out?

Your system is over 55 years old, and that's the core issue. Homes from that era in Downtown Heavener were wired with NM-B Romex, which was fine for the time, but not for the constant, high-wattage demands of a 2026 household. Modern appliances, like that AC unit, computers, and kitchen gadgets, create a cumulative load that original circuits simply weren't designed to handle. This isn't about wear so much as capacity; the system is being asked to do a job it was never sized for.

We get ice storms and summer brownouts. What can I do to protect my home's electrical system?

Preparing for Ouachita foothills weather means planning for both winter ice and summer peak AC loads. For winter, a properly installed and permitted generator with a transfer switch is key for extended outages. For summer brownouts, which strain motors and compressors, consider installing a hard-wired surge protector and having your AC unit's electrical connections inspected. Consistent low voltage during a brownout can overheat and damage the motor in your air handler or refrigerator.

I smell something burning from an outlet in my living room. How quickly can a master electrician get here?

A burning smell is a top-priority dispatch. From our base near Heavener Runestone Park, we can typically be on US-59 and to most Downtown locations within 5 to 8 minutes. Don't use that circuit, and if you can safely do so, turn off the breaker for that outlet immediately. Our first move on arrival is to isolate the fault, which is often a loose connection overheating inside the box, and make the area safe before any repairs begin.

My smart TV and modem keep getting fried during thunderstorms. Does PSO's grid have issues, or is it my house?

Public Service Company of Oklahoma (PSO) manages the grid, but the frequent lightning in our region creates high surge risk that their infrastructure can't always absorb. The problem likely originates outside, but without proper protection at your service panel, those surges travel directly into your home's wiring. A whole-house surge protector installed at your main panel is the first and most critical defense, creating a sacrificial barrier to protect your sensitive electronics from both utility grid fluctuations and direct lightning strikes.

I want to upgrade my electrical panel. What permits are needed in Oklahoma, and does the work have to be inspected?

All service upgrades require a permit from the Oklahoma Uniform Building Code Commission and a final inspection. As a master electrician licensed by the Oklahoma Construction Industries Board, I handle that red tape for you. The work must comply with the 2020 NEC, which governs everything from the new panel's clearance to the updated grounding requirements. Skipping permits risks fines, voids your homeowner's insurance in case of a fire, and can create serious safety issues an inspector would catch.

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