Across the metro, most of the work falls into two patterns. One is an old or flagged panel that turns up at an inspection, an insurance letter, or a home sale. The other is a service that can't carry a new load when you add an electric vehicle (EV) charger, a heat pump, or a finished basement. Which one a home faces usually tracks with where and when it was built, so the communities below are grouped by the part of the metro they sit in.
Front Range foothills
Mountain and foothills homes, where a multi-day winter outage cuts well water and heat, and services added onto for decades meet today's loads.
Conifer
Multi-day mountain outages cut well water and heat; backup-power transfer switches for standby generators.
Conifer electrician →Evergreen
Mid-century foothills cabins with service undersized for a well pump, EV charger, and heat pump together.
Evergreen electrician →Genesee
Underground service buried through rock at altitude; aging 150 to 200-amp services undersized for modern loads.
Genesee electrician →Golden
Mid-century to 1980s homes with panels flagged at sale or insurance, and 100-amp services maxed by EV charging.
Golden electrician →Morrison
Mid-century canyon cabins added onto for decades, and custom homes that bring a capacity question.
Morrison electrician →West & northwest metro
Older neighborhoods near the foothills and newer northwest tracts, a mix of aging or flagged panels and capacity that modern loads outgrow.
Arvada
Original Challenger panels in 1980s-90s northwest tract homes; older neighborhoods bring aging Federal Pacific and Zinsco concern.
Arvada electrician →Wheat Ridge
1950s fuse boxes and original 60-amp service in some of the oldest residential stock in the metro.
Wheat Ridge electrician →LakewoodHome base
Mid-century Green Mountain and north-side homes carrying Federal Pacific and Zinsco on original 100-amp service.
Lakewood electrician →Southwest Denver
1950s-60s Harvey Park and Bear Valley homes with heavy Federal Pacific and Zinsco; accessory dwelling units push older service past its limit.
Southwest Denver electrician →South metro
Postwar and master-planned suburbs, where services sized decades ago meet today's EV and heat-pump loads, and panels turn up flagged at a sale or insurance review.
Littleton
Postwar 1950s-70s homes on original 60 or 100-amp service for today's EV and heat-pump loads.
Littleton electrician →Ken Caryl
Older sections carry late-1970s and 80s Federal Pacific and Zinsco panels; newer phases lean capacity, not brand.
Ken Caryl electrician →Highlands Ranch
1980s 100 and 125-amp services now at capacity with modern loads, with service changes to 200 amps.
Highlands Ranch electrician →Centennial
1970s homes with a heavy concentration of Federal Pacific and Zinsco panels flagged at sale or insurance.
Centennial electrician →Englewood
Some of the metro's smallest original services, with obsolete Federal Pacific, Zinsco, Challenger, and Pushmatic panels.
Englewood electrician →Greenwood Village
1970s-80s neighborhoods on original 100 to 150-amp panels, right-sized to larger homes' real loads.
Greenwood Village electrician →What we do across the metro
Panel Replacement
Aging, hazardous, or flagged panels, including Federal Pacific, Zinsco, Challenger, fuse boxes, and split-bus.
What a panel replacement involves →Service Changes & Upgrades
More capacity, or a failing service entrance, replaced from the utility connection in. Overhead or underground.
What a service change involves →Subpanels
Out of breaker slots, or powering a garage, basement, or accessory dwelling unit (ADU).
What a subpanel install involves →Transfer Switches
Run the essentials on a portable generator during an outage, without backfeeding the line.
What a transfer switch involves →Not sure what you have? See the panel guide to identify your panel, or read how the work is done. Every home is different, and the specific scope for your project is determined during an on-site visit.
This page describes the communities we serve and general project context; it is not a quote, diagnosis, or commitment. The permitting authority, serving utility, and required scope for your specific address are confirmed on site by a licensed electrician.
Schedule an Assessment
Tell us what's going on with your panel or your project and we'll set up an on-site visit. You talk to a licensed electrician, not a call center.