★★★★★ Perfect 5.0 Star Rating on Google
★★★★★ “Grant and Tyler at Three Rivers Electric did a Meter Socket Replacement at my house. They are knowledgeable and reliable people. I will recommend them to anyone that needs electrical work.” — Alie Casulla★★★★★ “Very smooth process, clear communication, and fair pricing for our ceiling fan installation. Would definitely recommend!” — Jake Woodrich★★★★★ “I could not be more thrilled and satisfied with the job that Three Rivers Electric did for me! I had 5 bids from other companies and chose Three Rivers because they were honest, straightforward and professional! Grant and Tyler did a FABULOUS job and they were GREAT to work with!!! I’m so glad I went with them! My new under the cabinet lights are PERFECT!!!” — Laurie Platt★★★★★ “I had a great experience with Three Rivers Electric! The response times were great, they gave a transparent quote, they completely the work quickly and did a great job. I would definitely recommend!” — Haley Van Cleve★★★★★ “Three Rivers Electric is a fantastic, young and local company for an EV charger install. The best things about them are that they are less expensive than their competition, they give you options for the EV charger install location, they work hard and fast, and they are really knowledgeable about EV chargers. We got a quote from another company for comparison, and it was WAY more expensive with only 1 option provided.” — Matthew Nordeen★★★★★ “The team at Three Rivers Electric provided me with solid advice and options, and did a fantastic job with installation of my solar project. They responded immediately when a roofer accidentally severed an old and brittle power line, and got Xcel out fast. In addition to providing great service, they are super friendly and helpful. In fact, I was so happy with their service I hired them for three additional projects, including installing living room ceiling lights & fan, converting my wood fireplace to electric and my gas dryer hookup to electric. I will definitely use them for my future projects.” — Audie Black★★★★★ “Great service on a difficult job installing 220 in our garage for my Prius. Got 3 bids from other electricians and Three Rivers sent Tyler and Grant who managed to get a line thru from one end of the house to the garage, with many unseen obstacles in the finished ceiling. 2 very "Can Do" guys! Thanks a million!!” — Lisa Citak★★★★★ “Excellent service from start to finish. I had two recessed can lights that stopped working and couldn’t figure out the issue. They were able to troubleshoot it quickly, fix the problem, and make sure everything was working properly before leaving. Professional, efficient, and reasonably priced. Highly recommend if you need an electrician in the St. Paul Park area.” — Sean Hogan★★★★★ “Worked with Grant and Tyler. They were able to get electricity into my detached garage. I’ve been trying to get it done for over 3 years and they accomplished it in less than half a day.” — Kcs★★★★★ “What a smooth process! Tyler reached out right after my Thumbtack request, and despite my crazy work schedule, he accommodated me by coming as early as 7 AM to install my Tesla charger.” — Zobia Ahmed★★★★★ “Price was a bit high but worth it for the experience that I had. Glad my money went to good humans.” — Hayden Northup★★★★★ “Grant and Tyler at Three Rivers Electric did a Meter Socket Replacement at my house. They are knowledgeable and reliable people. I will recommend them to anyone that needs electrical work.” — Alie Casulla★★★★★ “Very smooth process, clear communication, and fair pricing for our ceiling fan installation. Would definitely recommend!” — Jake Woodrich★★★★★ “I could not be more thrilled and satisfied with the job that Three Rivers Electric did for me! I had 5 bids from other companies and chose Three Rivers because they were honest, straightforward and professional! Grant and Tyler did a FABULOUS job and they were GREAT to work with!!! I’m so glad I went with them! My new under the cabinet lights are PERFECT!!!” — Laurie Platt★★★★★ “I had a great experience with Three Rivers Electric! The response times were great, they gave a transparent quote, they completely the work quickly and did a great job. I would definitely recommend!” — Haley Van Cleve★★★★★ “Three Rivers Electric is a fantastic, young and local company for an EV charger install. The best things about them are that they are less expensive than their competition, they give you options for the EV charger install location, they work hard and fast, and they are really knowledgeable about EV chargers. We got a quote from another company for comparison, and it was WAY more expensive with only 1 option provided.” — Matthew Nordeen★★★★★ “The team at Three Rivers Electric provided me with solid advice and options, and did a fantastic job with installation of my solar project. They responded immediately when a roofer accidentally severed an old and brittle power line, and got Xcel out fast. In addition to providing great service, they are super friendly and helpful. In fact, I was so happy with their service I hired them for three additional projects, including installing living room ceiling lights & fan, converting my wood fireplace to electric and my gas dryer hookup to electric. I will definitely use them for my future projects.” — Audie Black★★★★★ “Great service on a difficult job installing 220 in our garage for my Prius. Got 3 bids from other electricians and Three Rivers sent Tyler and Grant who managed to get a line thru from one end of the house to the garage, with many unseen obstacles in the finished ceiling. 2 very "Can Do" guys! Thanks a million!!” — Lisa Citak★★★★★ “Excellent service from start to finish. I had two recessed can lights that stopped working and couldn’t figure out the issue. They were able to troubleshoot it quickly, fix the problem, and make sure everything was working properly before leaving. Professional, efficient, and reasonably priced. Highly recommend if you need an electrician in the St. Paul Park area.” — Sean Hogan★★★★★ “Worked with Grant and Tyler. They were able to get electricity into my detached garage. I’ve been trying to get it done for over 3 years and they accomplished it in less than half a day.” — Kcs★★★★★ “What a smooth process! Tyler reached out right after my Thumbtack request, and despite my crazy work schedule, he accommodated me by coming as early as 7 AM to install my Tesla charger.” — Zobia Ahmed★★★★★ “Price was a bit high but worth it for the experience that I had. Glad my money went to good humans.” — Hayden Northup

Electrical Glossary

Electrical work comes with a lot of jargon. This plain-English glossary explains the terms Twin Cities homeowners run into most — on inspection reports, quotes, and permit paperwork — so you can make confident decisions about your home. Questions about any of these? The licensed team at Three Rivers Electric is happy to explain.

Your Electrical System

Service Panel (Breaker Panel / Load Center)
The metal box where power from the utility is split into the circuits that feed your home. Each circuit gets its own breaker. Check whether your panel has room for new loads.
Amperage (Service Size)
The total electrical capacity of your home, measured in amps. Older homes often have 100-amp service; most modern homes need 200-amp service to handle EV chargers, hot tubs, and heat pumps.
Circuit Breaker
A switch that automatically shuts off a circuit when it draws too much current, preventing overheating. A breaker that trips repeatedly is a sign something needs attention.
Subpanel
A smaller secondary panel fed from the main panel, used to add circuits for a garage, addition, or workshop without running everything back to the main box.
Dedicated Circuit
A circuit that serves a single appliance (like a microwave, EV charger, or furnace) so it isn’t overloaded by sharing power with other devices.
Disconnect
A switch that completely cuts power to a piece of equipment (such as an AC unit or generator) for safe service.
Meter / Meter Socket
The utility’s device that measures how much electricity you use, and the enclosure it plugs into where utility power enters your home.

Safety Devices

GFCI (Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupter)
An outlet or breaker that shuts off power in a fraction of a second if it detects current leaking to ground — required near water (kitchens, baths, outdoors) to prevent shock.
AFCI (Arc-Fault Circuit Interrupter)
A breaker that detects dangerous electrical arcing (a common cause of house fires) and cuts power before it ignites. Now required for most living-area circuits.
Whole-Home Surge Protector
A device installed at the panel that absorbs voltage spikes from storms or the grid, protecting everything plugged into your home at once.
Grounding
A safety path that directs stray electricity harmlessly into the earth, reducing shock and fire risk. Older homes sometimes lack proper grounding.
Bonding
Connecting metal parts (pipes, panels, equipment) together so they stay at the same electrical potential, preventing dangerous voltage differences.
Hardwired Smoke & CO Detectors
Detectors wired into your home’s power (with battery backup) and interconnected, so when one alarms they all do.

Wiring & Materials

Knob-and-Tube Wiring
An early-1900s wiring method using ceramic knobs and tubes. It lacks a ground, degrades over time, and is often a safety and insurance concern — many older Twin Cities homes still have some. Learn about rewiring.
Aluminum Wiring
Common in homes built in the 1960s–70s. Aluminum expands and loosens at connections over time, creating fire risk unless properly remediated.
Romex (NM Cable)
The flat plastic-sheathed cable used for most modern residential wiring, containing hot, neutral, and ground conductors.
Conduit
Rigid or flexible tubing that protects wiring, typically required in garages, basements, and outdoor or exposed runs.
Hot, Neutral & Ground
The three conductors in a standard circuit: the hot carries current to the device, the neutral returns it, and the ground is a safety path.
Junction Box
An enclosed box where wires connect or branch. Code requires connections to be inside an accessible box — never hidden in a wall.
Receptacle (Outlet)
The point where you plug in devices. 15-amp and 20-amp versions exist; some appliances require the higher-capacity 20-amp type.

Power & Measurement

Volt, Amp & Watt
Volts measure electrical “pressure,” amps measure the flow of current, and watts measure power used (volts × amps). Standard U.S. outlets are 120 volts; large appliances use 240 volts.
Kilowatt-Hour (kWh)
The unit your utility bills you by — one kilowatt of power used for one hour.
Single-Phase vs. Three-Phase
Homes use single-phase power; larger commercial buildings often use three-phase, which delivers more power more efficiently for heavy equipment.
Power Surge
A brief spike in voltage — from lightning, grid switching, or large appliances — that can damage electronics over time.
Brownout (Voltage Sag)
A temporary drop in voltage that can cause lights to dim and strain motors and electronics.
Backfeed
Electricity flowing the wrong direction into the grid — a serious hazard with improperly connected generators, which is why a transfer switch is essential.

Upgrades & Add-Ons

Service Upgrade (“Heavy-Up”)
Increasing your home’s electrical capacity — usually from 100 to 200 amps — to safely support modern demand. See panel upgrades.
EV Charger (Level 1 vs. Level 2)
Level 1 charges from a standard 120V outlet (slow); Level 2 uses a 240V circuit for much faster charging and usually needs a dedicated circuit. EV charger installation.
Standby Generator
A permanently installed generator that powers your home automatically during an outage. Size your generator.
Transfer Switch
The device that safely switches your home between utility power and generator power, preventing dangerous backfeed.
Load Calculation
A code-based calculation of your home’s total electrical demand, used to confirm your panel and service can handle new equipment.
Recessed Lighting (Can Lights)
Light fixtures installed flush into the ceiling for a clean, modern look.
Smart Panel
A modern panel that lets you monitor and control circuits from your phone and manage backup power and solar.

Permits & Code

NEC (National Electrical Code)
The national safety standard for electrical installations, updated every few years and adopted (with local amendments) across Minnesota.
Permit
Authorization from your city or county to perform electrical work, ensuring it’s done to code and inspected. Licensed electricians pull permits as part of the job.
Inspection
A review by a local inspector confirming the work meets code before it’s energized or closed up.
Code Compliance
Meeting all applicable safety rules. Non-compliant work can fail inspection, void insurance, and create hazards — a key reason to hire a licensed pro.

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