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Electrical Contractor in North Texas — Renovation Wiring, Panel Projects, and New Construction

An electrical contractor in North Texas handles project-scale work beyond service calls — kitchen rewires, panel upgrades, garage conversions, and new construction rough-in across Collin, Denton, and Dallas counties. Beachy Electric is a TDLR-licensed Master Electrician with 17+ years coordinating phased electrical projects alongside general contractors. Call 469-283-1089 for a project walkthrough.


Beachy Electric — Electrical Contracting at a Glance

  • Master Electrician: TDLR licensed, 17+ years in residential and light commercial project work
  • Project Types: Kitchen/bath remodels, room additions, garage conversions, whole-house rewires, new construction
  • Permit Authority: We pull permits and coordinate inspections across Plano, McKinney, Frisco, Allen, and 30+ municipalities
  • GC Coordination: Phased scheduling with general contractors, plumbers, HVAC, and framers
  • Service Area:Collin County, Denton County, Dallas County
  • Multi-Day Capability: Structured for phased rough-in, trim-out, and final — projects from 2 days to 4+ weeks
  • Phone:469-283-1089 — call to schedule a project scope review

Why North Texas Renovation and Construction Projects Need a Licensed Electrical Contractor

Collin County issued over 14,000 residential building permits in the past year alone. Cities like Celina, Prosper, and Anna are adding subdivisions at a pace that has outrun local inspection capacity — Celina’s population tripled in the last decade from roughly 6,000 to over 23,000, and new construction electrical in these communities requires proper load calculations from the start. A kitchen remodel in a 2024 Prosper build demands different circuit planning than a kitchen gut-renovation in a 1978 ranch in Richardson, but both need a licensed electrical contractor who understands NEC 2023 requirements and each city’s local amendments.

The distinction between an electrician and an electrical contractor matters for project-scale work. An electrician near you handles service calls — replacing an outlet, troubleshooting a tripped breaker, adding a light fixture. An electrical contractor manages the full scope of project electrical: load calculations sized for the finished space, panel upgrades from 100A to 200A when renovation loads exceed existing capacity, phased rough-in wiring before drywall goes up, and final trim-out after paint. In older neighborhoods across Plano, Garland, and south Richardson — where homes built between 1968 and 1985 often have aluminum branch wiring on undersized panels — a renovation without an electrical contractor risks code violations, failed inspections, and hidden fire hazards behind the new drywall.

Beachy Electric brings Master Electrician credentials, GL and workers’ comp insurance, and direct experience coordinating electrical alongside framing, plumbing, and HVAC trades. We also handle EV charger installations as part of garage and addition projects, and provide emergency electrician response when a renovation uncovers unsafe conditions that need immediate attention. From a garage conversion in Murphy that needs its own subpanel to a full new-construction build in Celina requiring 320-amp service, we handle the electrical scope that general contractors and homeowners need managed by a single accountable license holder. Call 469-283-1089 to start your project scope review.


What You Get with Beachy Electric as Your Electrical Contractor

Full Project Planning — Load Calculations, Panel Sizing, Circuit Mapping

Before a single wire gets pulled, we calculate the total connected load for the finished project. A kitchen remodel adding a 50-amp range, dishwasher, disposal, under-cabinet lighting, and dedicated refrigerator circuit in a McKinney home needs 60-80 amps of new capacity. If the existing panel can’t handle it, we spec the upgrade. Every circuit gets mapped on paper before rough-in starts, preventing the callbacks and change orders that happen when contractors wing it.

Multi-Trade Coordination — GC, Plumber, HVAC, Framer

Electrical rough-in happens after framing and before insulation. Miss that window and the project stalls or someone cuts into finished drywall. Beachy Electric schedules directly with your general contractor, coordinates wall penetrations with your plumber, and verifies HVAC disconnect locations before running circuits. For homeowners in Frisco and Allen managing their own renovations, we handle the sequencing so electrical doesn’t become the bottleneck.

Phased Work Capability — Rough-In, Trim-Out, Final

Project electrical isn’t a single visit. Rough-in means running wire, setting boxes, and pulling home runs to the panel — all before drywall. Trim-out happens after paint: installing devices, switches, fixtures, and covers. Final includes testing, labeling, and documentation. Each phase requires separate scheduling and often separate inspections. Cities like Little Elm and Anna require a rough-in inspection before insulation, and a final inspection before occupancy. We manage the full sequence.

Permit and Inspection Management

Pulling an electrical permit in Plano is a different process than in Denton or Dallas. Each municipality has its own building department, fee schedule, and inspection request system. We handle permit applications, submit plans where required, schedule inspections at the right project milestones, and attend inspections to answer questions. The permit stays in our name because we’re the licensed contractor of record — your insurance and resale documentation stay clean. Call 469-283-1089 with your project details.


Electrical Contracting Project Types and Timelines

Project Type What’s Included Typical Timeline
Kitchen Remodel Electrical Load calc, dedicated circuits for range/dishwasher/disposal/refrigerator, undercabinet lighting, GFCI outlets per code, island rough-in 2–4 days (phased)
Bathroom Remodel Electrical GFCI circuits, exhaust fan wiring, vanity lighting, heated floor circuit, code-compliant outlet placement 1–2 days (phased)
Room Addition / Garage Conversion Subpanel or new circuits, lighting layout, outlet placement per NEC, HVAC disconnect, smoke/CO detector wiring 3–5 days (phased)
Panel Upgrade (100A to 200A) Main panel replacement, load calculation, meter base coordination with Oncor, city permit and inspection 1–2 days
Whole-House Rewire Remove aluminum/cloth wiring, install copper throughout, new panel, all new devices, code-compliant grounding 5–10 days (phased)
New Construction Electrical Full rough-in from panel to every box, service entrance coordination, phased inspections, trim-out, final testing 2–4 weeks (phased)

Timelines vary based on home size, panel condition, and permit processing. A 1,200 sq ft garage conversion in Sachse is a different scope than a 4,500 sq ft new build in Prosper. Call 469-283-1089 for a project-specific estimate.


How an Electrical Contracting Project Works with Beachy Electric

1

Project Scope Review

Call 469-283-1089 or submit your project details online. We ask specific questions about the renovation or build: what’s being added, what’s being moved, whether you have a general contractor, and what the target timeline looks like. Homeowners in Plano and McKinney typically get a scope call within 24 hours.

2

Site Walkthrough and Load Calculation

We visit the project site, inspect the existing panel and wiring, review architectural plans or sketches, and calculate the total load for the finished project. For a kitchen remodel in a 1982 Garland ranch, this means checking whether the existing 100-amp panel has capacity for the new appliance circuits — or whether a 200-amp upgrade needs to happen first. This step prevents mid-project surprises.

3

Detailed Project Estimate

Itemized pricing broken out by phase: rough-in labor, trim-out labor, materials, panel upgrade (if needed), permit fees, and inspection coordination. No lump-sum verbal quotes. Homeowners in Wylie and Fairview keep this documentation for insurance, financing, and resale records.

4

Permits and Material Staging

We file permits with the local building department, order long-lead materials (panels, specialty fixtures, subpanel components), and coordinate start dates with your GC or other trades. Cities like Frisco and The Colony process residential electrical permits in 3–7 business days.

5

Phased Installation

Rough-in: wire runs, box placement, panel connections — all before drywall closes the walls. We schedule and pass the rough-in inspection. Trim-out: after paint, we install switches, receptacles, fixtures, and device plates. Every circuit gets tested, labeled, and documented. For new construction in Celina or Anna, we coordinate the full sequence from service entrance through certificate of occupancy.

6

Final Inspection and Documentation

We schedule the final city inspection, attend it to answer any questions, and provide you with complete documentation: permit records, as-built circuit maps, panel schedules, photos, and warranty information. This package protects your investment for insurance claims, home sales, and future electrical work.


Frequently Asked Questions — Electrical Contractor in North Texas

An electrician handles service calls — troubleshooting a tripped breaker, swapping an outlet, adding a light fixture. An electrical contractor manages project-scale work: full kitchen rewires, room additions, new construction rough-in, panel upgrades, and multi-phase installations that require permits, inspections, and trade coordination. In Texas, the electrical contractor holds the Master Electrician license, pulls permits in their own name, and carries project liability. Call 469-283-1089 to discuss your project scope.

Kitchen remodel electrical in Collin and Denton counties typically runs $2,500–$6,500 depending on scope. A basic recircuit with new GFCI outlets and undercabinet lighting in a Allen home costs $2,500–$3,500. A full gut-renovation requiring a panel upgrade, dedicated appliance circuits, island rough-in, and lighting redesign in Plano or Frisco runs $4,500–$6,500. Call 469-283-1089 for an itemized project estimate.

In most cases, yes — especially in homes built before 1995 in Richardson, Garland, or south Plano. A modern kitchen with a 50-amp electric range, dishwasher, disposal, refrigerator, and lighting can draw 60–80 amps. If your home has a 100-amp panel with limited open breaker spaces, you’ll need a panel upgrade to 200A before the kitchen circuits can be added safely. We run a load calculation during the site walkthrough to determine this before work begins.

Yes. We work directly with GCs on scheduling, phasing, and coordination. Electrical rough-in has to happen after framing and before insulation — miss that window and someone is cutting open finished walls. We coordinate wall penetration locations with plumbers, verify HVAC disconnect positions, and schedule inspections so the project stays on track. For renovation projects in McKinney, Frisco, and Flower Mound, we’ve worked with dozens of local GCs.

A full rewire on a typical 1,500–2,500 sq ft home in Garland, Richardson, or Rowlett takes 5–10 working days depending on wall access and panel scope. Homes with aluminum wiring from the 1970s require complete replacement with copper, a new 200-amp panel, updated grounding, and AFCI/GFCI protection per current code. We phase the work so you maintain power to critical circuits throughout the project.

Any work that adds new circuits, moves existing wiring, upgrades a panel, or modifies the service entrance requires an electrical permit. Each municipality handles permits independently — Plano uses an online portal, McKinney requires in-person submittal for larger projects, and Dallas has separate residential and commercial departments. Beachy Electric pulls permits, pays fees, and schedules rough-in and final inspections as part of every contracting project. Contact us for details.

Homes built between 1965 and 1985 in south Plano, Richardson, and parts of Garland often have 100-amp panels, aluminum branch wiring, and outdated grounding systems. If you’re renovating a kitchen, adding a room, or converting a garage, the existing wiring may not support modern loads and won’t meet current NEC code requirements. During the site walkthrough, we assess the existing system and determine whether a targeted upgrade or full rewire is needed before renovation work can proceed.

A garage conversion to livable space requires its own electrical circuits — typically a subpanel fed from the main panel. You’ll need lighting circuits, outlet circuits spaced per NEC (every 12 feet along walls), AFCI-protected bedroom circuits if the space includes a bedroom, HVAC disconnect wiring, and smoke/CO detector circuits. In Murphy, Sachse, and Lucas, the city requires a building permit with electrical plans and both rough-in and final inspections. Call 469-283-1089 for a garage conversion assessment.


North Texas Service Areas — Electrical Contractor

Don’t see your city? Call 469-283-1089 to confirm coverage.


Planning a Project? Start with the Electrical.

Kitchen remodels, room additions, garage conversions, new construction, whole-house rewires — the electrical scope sets the pace for every other trade. Get it planned, permitted, and phased correctly from the start.

Master Electrician • TDLR Licensed • 17+ Years • GL + Workers’ Comp

469-283-1089

Or schedule a project walkthrough online →