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Electricians in Honolulu, HI

Find licensed electricians in Honolulu, Hawaii. Check local permit requirements and get a cost estimate before you hire.

Last updated: April 2026 · Cost data from RSMeans & BLS regional indices · Permit data from official city .gov sources

Local context for Honolulu

Honolulu permits are issued by the Department of Planning and Permitting (DPP) on Oahu. In August 2025 DPP launched the new HNL Build Salesforce-based permit system, replacing the long-running POSSE platform. DPP has a well-known permit backlog, with more complex reviews historically running 6 to 12 months, so project scheduling in Honolulu looks very different from most mainland cities.

Permits filed through Honolulu Department of Planning and Permitting (DPP) · official portal

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Before you hire in Honolulu

A short checklist of things to verify before you sign a contract or hand over a deposit. These apply whether you find your contractor here, on Angi, or anywhere else.

  1. 1

    Building permit on the contractor, not you

    Most cities require a permit for any structural work. The contractor should pull the permit in their name so they carry the liability for code compliance. If a contractor offers to skip the permit or asks you to pull it as a homeowner, that is a warning sign.
  2. 2

    Licensed electrician

    Most states require a state-issued electrical license. Always ask for the license number, confirm it matches the person doing the work (not just the business owner), and check it against the issuing board's online lookup.
  3. 3

    General liability + workers comp

    Ask for a Certificate of Insurance (COI) with you listed as a certificate holder, before any work begins. Without workers comp, an injured worker can sue the homeowner directly. $500K–$1M general liability is standard.
  4. 4

    Written contract with clear terms

    Get it in writing. The contract should cover: scope of work, total price (not hourly unless explicitly agreed), materials and brands, start and finish dates, payment schedule tied to milestones (not calendar dates), warranty period, and procedures for change orders. Never pay more than 1/3 up front, and never pay the final payment until the work passes inspection.
  5. 5

    References and public reputation

    Ask for 3 references on recent similar projects and actually call them. Cross-check reviews across Google, the Better Business Bureau, and the state licensing board's complaint history. A contractor with zero online footprint is a risk, even if they come highly recommended.

Every contractor we list is verified against public records, but verification is not a quality guarantee. Run through this checklist on any contractor you are seriously considering.

How to Choose a Electrician in Honolulu

Follow these steps to find a reliable, licensed electrician in the Honolulu, Hawaii area.

Verify the master electrician license

Any permitted electrical work must be signed off by a licensed master electrician. Look up the license on your state electrical board before hiring.

Confirm liability insurance and bonding

Electricians should carry at least $1M general liability plus workers compensation. Bonded contractors give you recourse if work fails inspection.

Require permits on every job

Panel upgrades, new circuits, EV chargers, and rewires all need a permit. A licensed electrician pulls the permit — not you. Cash deals without permits void your insurance.

Get 3+ written bids for big work

Panel upgrades and rewires should have itemized bids. Watch for "too good to be true" pricing, which often signals unlicensed labor or corner-cutting on conductors.

Ask about EV charger certification

For Level 2 installs, ask if the electrician is familiar with your panel brand and local utility requirements. Some utilities require load management gear.

Demand a written warranty

Quality electrical work comes with a 1-year workmanship warranty at minimum. Equipment manufacturer warranties (panels, chargers) run 5-25 years separately.

Working with electricians in Honolulu

  • Hurricane and high-wind design carries through all of Honolulu, so structural connectors, roof tie-downs, and sheathing nailing patterns are reviewed in detail
  • Oahu has strict Special Management Area rules for shoreline projects, which can add a separate SMA permit on top of the building permit
  • Material lead times from the mainland routinely add 4 to 8 weeks, so most contractors order long before permit issuance rather than after

Electrical Costs in Honolulu, HI

Typical prices for residential electrical work in Honolulu. Ranges reflect full-installation pricing with permit included where applicable — not service-call minimums. Hourly rates run $86-$180 per hour for troubleshooting and small repairs.

ServiceLowAverageHigh
Service call / troubleshooting$192$246$325
New outlet install$233$299$395
Ceiling fan replacement$311$399$527
200A panel upgrade$2,905$3,724$4,916
Level 2 EV charger install$1,712$2,195$2,897
Generator transfer switch$1,401$1,796$2,371
Whole-house rewire (1,800 sq ft)$11,411$14,630$19,312

Cost data derived from RSMeans regional indices, BLS construction wage data, and NECA market surveys. Actual quotes will vary based on scope, panel condition, and utility coordination. Permit fees in Honolulu typically run $80-$466.

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Electrical Permit Requirements in Honolulu

Nearly all electrical work in Honolulu requires a permit — panel upgrades, new circuits, outlet additions beyond simple fixture swaps, EV chargers, generator transfer switches, and whole-house rewires. Your licensed electrician pulls the permit, not you. Permit fees typically range $80-$466. Work without a permit is a code violation that can void homeowners insurance and block a future home sale.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do electricians charge in Honolulu, Hawaii?

Electricians in Honolulu typically charge $86-$180 per hour, with a minimum service call fee around $192-$325. Job-based pricing is more common than hourly for installs: adding an outlet runs $233-$395, a ceiling fan swap runs $311-$527. Complex work like panel upgrades or whole-house rewires is quoted per project.

How much does a panel upgrade cost in Honolulu?

Upgrading from a 100-amp to a 200-amp service panel in Honolulu typically costs $2,905-$4,916, including the panel, meter socket, permit, and utility coordination. Older homes with aluminum or cloth-wrapped wiring, or panels requiring a meter relocation, can push the high end over $6,391. Most residential EV charger installs and solar tie-ins require a 200-amp panel.

How much does it cost to install a Level 2 EV charger in Honolulu?

Level 2 EV charger installation in Honolulu runs $1,712-$2,897 for a 40-amp circuit on a short cable run from the panel. Longer runs, trenching to a detached garage, panel upgrades, or load management gear push costs higher. The federal Section 30C credit (30% up to $1,000) is still available through June 30, 2026 for residential installs in qualifying census tracts — ask your electrician to confirm eligibility before the deadline.

Do I need a permit to hire an electrician in Honolulu?

Yes. Nearly all electrical work in Honolulu requires a permit — panel upgrades, new circuits, outlet additions, EV chargers, generator transfer switches, and whole-house rewires. Permit fees typically range $80-$466 and your licensed electrician should pull the permit (not you). Simple fixture swaps on existing circuits are the main exemption. Work without a permit is a code violation that can void your homeowners insurance and block a future home sale.

How do I verify an electrician is licensed in Hawaii?

Most states publish a searchable licensing roster you can use to confirm an electrician's license status, bond, and disciplinary history. In Hawaii, look up the state electrical board (or department of labor) online license lookup before hiring. Ask to see the license card, confirm the license number matches public records, and require proof of liability insurance and workers comp (never pay cash without these verified).

What is a master electrician vs a journeyman?

A master electrician has passed an advanced exam (typically requiring 7,000+ hours of field work plus written and practical tests) and can pull permits, sign off on work, and supervise journeymen and apprentices. A journeyman electrician has completed a 4-year apprenticeship and can do most wiring work under a master's license. For any job requiring a permit in Honolulu, a master electrician must be on the license — confirm this before signing a contract.

Why are Honolulu permits so slow?

DPP has been publicly working through a permit backlog for several years. Moving to HNL Build in August 2025 was intended to modernize the pipeline. Simple solar and reroof permits move faster; new construction and additions typically still take multiple months.

Do I need a Hawaii-licensed contractor for Honolulu work?

Yes. Any project over $1,000 in combined labor and materials requires a Hawaii contractor licensed through the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs. DPP will not finalize inspections without a licensed contractor on file unless you pulled an owner-builder permit.