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Electrician in Causeway Coast & Glens, Northern Ireland

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Looking for a electrician across Causeway Coast & Glens? NI Trades is an introduction service that matches Northern Ireland homeowners with electricians who have passed our application-stage checks. Causeway Coast & Glens is one of 11 NI council districts; tradespeople choose the councils they cover, so picking a council means you reach every electrician who works anywhere in this district. Post your job in two minutes - only profiles of electricians interested in your specific job are revealed, and your contact details stay private until you choose who to talk to. Insurance, credentials and references are checked at application stage only - please verify current insurance and credentials directly with any tradesperson before work begins or any money is paid.

What hiring a electrician in Causeway Coast & Glens looks like

Causeway Coast & Glens is a rural and coastal district on the north coast, home to around 144,000 people across towns like Coleraine, Ballymoney, Limavady, Portrush and Ballycastle. The stock includes seaside and holiday homes around Portrush and Portstewart, town terraces in Coleraine and Ballymoney, and a large base of dispersed rural cottages and farms through the Glens and Sperrin foothills.

For an electrician that usually means rewires, consumer-unit upgrades, EICRs and EV-charger installs. Coleraine, Ballymoney and Limavady are on the firmus gas network, but the coast and glens are heavily oil-dependent, and seasonal and holiday properties add their own heating quirks.

Causeway Coast & Glens at a glance

Population
around 144,000 (2021 Census)
Main towns
Coleraine, Ballymoney, Limavady, Portrush, Ballycastle
District
a rural and coastal district on the north coast
Heating
Coleraine, Ballymoney and Limavady are on the firmus gas network, but the coast and glens are heavily oil-dependent, and seasonal and holiday properties add their own heating quirks.
Extension Building Control fee
around £375 (Full Plans, 2026)

Sources: NISRA Census 2021 (population); each council's published Building Control fees schedule (2026 snapshot, fees rise each April); Phoenix Energy, firmus energy and the Gas to the West project (gas-network coverage).

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Building Control and approvals in Causeway Coast & Glens

If your electrician job involves building, electrical, heating or drainage work that needs sign-off, it is approved by Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council's own Building Control office, not a UK-wide body. A typical domestic extension on the Full Plans route costs around £375 in Causeway Coast & Glens as of 2026, and Building Control fees across the 11 NI councils rise each April.

Before work starts, check whether you also need planning permission: see our NI planning permission guide and NI Building Regulations guide. Council Building Control applications across Northern Ireland go through Building Control NI.

Common services

  • Full property rewire
  • Consumer unit (fuse board) upgrade
  • New lighting design & installation
  • Socket, switch & USB outlet fitting
  • EV charger installation
  • Security lighting & cameras
  • PAT testing
  • Smoke & carbon monoxide alarms
  • CCTV systems
  • Electric shower installation
  • Fault finding & diagnostics
  • Garden & external lighting

What to ask before hiring

  • Are you NICEIC, NAPIT or SELECT registered?
  • Will you provide an Electrical Installation Certificate?
  • Will you notify Building Control if required?
  • Are you fully insured?
  • Do you carry out Part P compliant work?
  • Can you provide references?
  • Will you test all work on completion?

Typical costs in Northern Ireland

Job typeTypical priceNotes
Hourly rate£45–£65/hrDay rate typically £250–£400
New socket installation£50–£150Per socket, surface or chase
Consumer unit upgrade£400–£800Full fuse board replacement
Full rewire (3-bed)£3,000–£6,000Includes first fix and second fix
EV charger installation£500–£1,200OZEV grant may apply
CCTV system installation£400–£1,500Depends on camera count
Electric shower installation£250–£500Requires new circuit
Electrical installation certificateIncluded in job costLegal requirement for notifiable work

Qualifications & accreditations to look for

NICEIC Approved Contractor
UK's leading electrical safety certification body
NAPIT Registered
National Association of Professional Inspectors and Testers
Part P Competent Person
Self-certification for domestic electrical work
City & Guilds 2382 (18th Edition)
Current wiring regulations — BS 7671
EV Charger Accreditation
Required for OZEV grant-eligible installations
Public Liability Insurance
Minimum £1m — required on NI Trades

Frequently asked questions

How do I know if I need a full rewire?
Signs include frequent tripping fuses, old round-pin sockets, rubber or fabric-covered wiring, lack of earth connections, or a fuse box over 25 years old. A qualified electrician can carry out an Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR) to assess the state of your wiring and advise whether a full or partial rewire is needed.
What is an Electrical Installation Certificate?
An EIC is a document your electrician must issue after carrying out notifiable electrical work. It confirms the installation has been tested and meets BS 7671 standards. Keep this document safely — you will need it when selling your home, and mortgage lenders increasingly require it.
Can I install my own sockets or light fittings?
In Northern Ireland, homeowners can carry out minor electrical work such as replacing like-for-like sockets and switches. However, any new circuits or work in bathrooms and kitchens must be carried out by a Part P registered electrician and notified to Building Control. Unregistered work can invalidate your home insurance and cause problems when selling.
Is an EV charger worth getting installed at home?
Home EV chargers are significantly faster than a 3-pin socket (typically 7kW vs 2.3kW), cutting overnight charging time from 24+ hours to under 8 hours. The OZEV government grant provides up to £350 off installation for eligible homeowners. An NICEIC or NAPIT registered electrician must carry out the work.

Helpful NI guides for hiring a electrician

Important
Electrical work in kitchens and bathrooms must comply with Part P building regulations. Your electrician should issue an Electrical Installation Certificate on completion — this is required when selling your home.

Causeway Coast & Glens is part of our Northern Ireland directory. NI Trades is an introduction service, we list tradespeople who have passed our application-stage checks, but we are not party to any contract you enter into with a tradesperson. See how we vet tradespeople or browse all trade categories.

Electricians in Causeway Coast & Glens towns8 towns
Electrician in BallycastleElectrician in BallymoneyElectrician in BushmillsElectrician in ColeraineElectrician in DungivenElectrician in LimavadyElectrician in PortrushElectrician in Portstewart
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