Top Emergency Electricians in Park City, UT, 84060 | Compare & Call

There are 189 electrician companies server in Park City UT

Homestead Electric

Homestead Electric

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (1)
974 S Main St, Pleasant Grove UT 84062
Electricians

Homestead Electric is a certified, locally-owned electrical service provider serving Pleasant Grove, UT, and the surrounding communities. We specialize in comprehensive residential and commercial elec...

Webb Electric

Webb Electric

★★★★☆ 3.9 / 5 (17)
1849 S 550th W, Lehi UT 84043
Electricians

Webb Electric is built on a foundation of 15 years of hands-on experience. Owner learned the trade from his father, who ran his own company for two decades, before gaining additional expertise with ot...

Action Plumbing, Heating, Air & Electric

Action Plumbing, Heating, Air & Electric

★★☆☆☆ 1.6 / 5 (319)
825 S Gladiola St, Salt Lake City UT 84104
Electricians, Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning/HVAC

Action Plumbing, Heating, Air & Electric is a locally owned and operated Salt Lake City contractor with over 23 years of experience serving the community. Our team of skilled, licensed, and NATE-certi...

Eagle Electric

Eagle Electric

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (3)
7000 S Commerce Park Dr Ste 100, Midvale UT 84047
Electricians

Eagle Electric is a trusted electrical contractor serving Midvale, UT, and the surrounding Salt Lake City area since 1987. Licensed in Utah and located at our current site since 1996, we provide relia...

Chesley Electric

Chesley Electric

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (4)
6421 N Business Loop Rd Unit G, Park City UT 84098
Electricians, Lighting Fixtures & Equipment, Home Automation

Chesley Electric is a trusted, licensed electrical contractor serving Park City and the surrounding areas for over 30 years. As a family-owned and operated business, we provide dependable electrical s...

Mint Electric

Mint Electric

★★★★★ 5.0 / 5 (5)
Mapleton UT 84664
Electricians

Mint Electric is a trusted electrical service provider serving Mapleton, UT, and surrounding areas. Our experienced team specializes in both residential and commercial electrical projects, from routin...

Captain Electric, LLC

Captain Electric, LLC

★★★★☆ 4.4 / 5 (7)
1510 W 400 S Ste 3, Orem UT 84058
Electricians, Lighting Fixtures & Equipment, Generator Installation/Repair

Captain Electric, LLC is a family-run electrical service deeply rooted in the Orem community. Founded by Joe, a third-generation electrician with over three decades of experience, the business was bui...

Bright Home Repair

Bright Home Repair

★★☆☆☆ 2.3 / 5 (3)
Herriman UT 84065
Handyman, General Contractors, Electricians

Jeff, the owner of Bright Home Repair, has been serving Herriman homeowners for over two decades. What began as a childhood fascination with fixing things, learned alongside his father, grew into a sk...

Northern Electric Company

Northern Electric Company

★★★★☆ 3.9 / 5 (7)
3414 S 300 W, Salt Lake City UT 84115
Electricians

Northern Electric Company is a trusted, local electrical service provider in Salt Lake City, founded by Master Electrician Tim in 1994. With a career beginning in 1978 through a state apprenticeship, ...

Any & All Electric

Any & All Electric

★★★★★ 4.7 / 5 (13)
1530 N State St Ste E, Lehi UT 84043
Electricians, Lighting Fixtures & Equipment

Any & All Electric is a Lehi-based electrical service founded in 2012 by owner Cody. Inspired by his father's entrepreneurial spirit and a fascination with electricity developed while working at an el...



Estimated Electrical Service Costs in Park City, UT

Emergency After-Hours CallEstimated Range
$234 - $319
Electrical Safety InspectionEstimated Range
$104 - $144
EV Charger InstallationEstimated Range
$694 - $934
Panel Upgrade (200 Amp)Estimated Range
$2,354 - $3,144
Ceiling Fan InstallationEstimated Range
$204 - $279

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

Questions and Answers

My lights flicker and my smart devices reset sometimes. Is this a problem with Rocky Mountain Power or my house wiring?

Flickering lights often point to a loose connection in your home's wiring, like at a receptacle or within the panel. However, Park City's moderate surge risk from seasonal lightning and grid switching by Rocky Mountain Power can also cause voltage sags that disrupt sensitive electronics. Differentiating requires diagnostic testing. Installing whole-house surge protection at the main panel is a critical defense for your smart home systems against external grid events.

My power is out and I smell something burning near the panel in Old Town. How fast can an electrician get here?

For a burning smell or total power loss, we treat it as an immediate safety dispatch. From a start point near Park City Mountain Resort, we can typically be on-site in Old Town within 10 to 15 minutes using UT-224. The priority is to secure the home, diagnose the source of the smell—often a failing breaker or overheated connection—and make the system safe before restoring power.

How should I prepare my home's electrical system for a Park City winter with temperatures down to -10°F and potential brownouts?

Winter preparedness starts with a professional inspection of your heating system's electrical connections and emergency heat strips. Ensure your generator transfer switch, if you have one, is serviced and ready for a potential brownout during peak heating season. For homes without a generator, consider installing an interlock kit on your main panel for safe portable generator use. These steps, along with the mentioned surge protection, guard against both extreme cold and grid instability.

I need a panel upgrade. What permits are required from the Park City Building Department, and do you handle that?

A service upgrade always requires a permit and inspection from the Park City Building Department, governed by the 2023 NEC. As a Utah Division of Professional Licensing master electrician, I pull all necessary permits on your behalf and ensure the installation meets the latest code for safety and energy efficiency. Handling this red tape is part of the service, providing you with a compliant, documented upgrade that protects your home's value and safety.

I have a Federal Pacific panel and want to add an EV charger. Is my 150A service in my 1995 home safe for this upgrade?

A Federal Pacific panel is a known fire hazard and must be replaced before any major upgrade; its breakers can fail to trip during an overload. Even with a new panel, a 150A service from 1995 may be insufficient for a Level 2 EV charger (40-50A) plus a modern heat pump, as it leaves little margin for the rest of the home's load. A full load calculation is essential, and a service upgrade to 200A is a common, code-compliant solution for both EV charging and electrified heating.

We live on a rocky hillside near the resort. Could the terrain be affecting our home's electrical grounding or power quality?

Yes, rocky soil presents a significant challenge for achieving a low-resistance grounding electrode system, which is vital for safety and surge dissipation. We often need to drive multiple grounding rods or use a concrete-encased electrode (Ufer ground) to meet code in these conditions. Furthermore, the dense tree canopy common on hillsides can cause line interference during high winds, contributing to the flickering or minor surges you might be experiencing.

My Old Town Park City home was built in 1995, and the lights dim when the microwave runs. Is the original wiring too old?

A 1995 home has a 31-year-old electrical system. The NM-B Romex wiring itself is still a modern cable type, but the entire system was designed for a different era of power consumption. Today's high-draw appliances, like air fryers and EV chargers, create cumulative loads that original circuits and the 150A service panel may not safely support. We often find these older systems lack the dedicated circuits and overall capacity needed for 2026 living, leading to voltage drop and nuisance tripping.

My home has underground electrical service. Does that make it more reliable or harder to repair in Old Town?

Underground service laterals are generally more reliable against weather and tree damage, which is a benefit in our climate. The primary challenge comes if a fault occurs in the buried cable between the utility transformer and your meter; locating and repairing it is more invasive and time-consuming than an overhead line repair. For any work on your side of the meter, the process is the same, but we coordinate closely with Rocky Mountain Power to ensure proper isolation and safety.

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