Website design for electricians
A $50,000-grade website for an electrical contractor, built for you, not by you.
An electrician's website has to separate residential, commercial, and emergency work cleanly, because those are three different buyers with three different urgencies. It needs licensing and ESA or local-authority compliance made visible, panel-upgrade and EV-charger pages (the high-value modern jobs), and a fast quote path. AtlasForge builds that site free and live within 48 hours.
Who this is for.
Three very different buyers reach an electrician's site: a homeowner who needs a panel upgrade or an EV charger, a property manager handling a commercial fit-out, and someone with a live electrical fault who needs help now. They have different budgets, different timelines, and different questions, and a single generic services page serves none of them well. The site that wins routes each one to a path that was clearly written for them.
What the old electrician website gets wrong.
These are the patterns we see on most electricians’ sites, and what a proper build fixes.
- Residential and commercial buyers land on the same generic page and neither sees themselves
- High-value modern jobs (panel upgrades, EV chargers, generators) have no dedicated pages to rank
- Licensing and electrical-authority compliance, a legal trust signal, is missing from the site
- An emergency electrical fault has no fast path to a booked visit
What a great electrician website includes.
A great electrician's site splits residential, commercial, and emergency cleanly at the top, so each buyer sees their own track immediately. It gives the modern high-value jobs, panel upgrades, EV chargers, generators, rewiring, their own pages, because those are searched by name and carry the best margins. It surfaces the license and the electrical-authority compliance as the legal trust signal it is, and it offers a quote path with photo upload so a customer can show the problem instead of describing it.
- Separate residential, commercial, and emergency tracks so each buyer sees their own path
- Dedicated pages for the high-value jobs: panel upgrades, EV chargers, generators, rewiring
- License numbers and electrical-authority compliance surfaced as trust signals and in schema
- A fast quote path with photo upload so a customer can show the problem
- Per-service-area pages for the towns you cover
- Service and LocalBusiness schema for map-pack and AI-answer visibility
Every one of these ships in the free build. This is the standard, not an upsell.
What a electrician website actually costs.
The cost of an electrician's site tracks the split into three buyer tracks plus the dedicated pages for the high-value modern work. A one-pager is cheap and ranks for nothing in particular; the value is in the panel-upgrade and EV-charger pages that capture searches with real intent and real budgets. You are paying for the pages that bring the jobs worth doing, not for a prettier homepage.
Real electrician sites we have built.
Live, on their own domains. Each was built before the owner paid anything.
KJS Electric
Ontario
Electrical contractor rebuilt from a legacy site into a fast Next.js build with service pages, value report, and verified handoff.
MacKinnon Electric
Prince Edward Island
PEI electrical contractor rebuilt with recovered local business assets, service pages, value report, and a clean Next.js build.