How to Hire · Twin Cities Metro

How to Hire an Electrician in the Twin Cities

Electrical work is one of the few home projects where a bad hire can literally burn you. A few straight questions up front tell you almost everything about who you’re dealing with. Here’s what to ask, what to watch for, and how to make sure the person in your panel actually knows what they’re doing.

Licensed, bonded & insured (MN EA761814) · Our own crew, not subcontractors · Written quotes & warranty

Most people hire an electrician maybe a handful of times in their life, usually when something’s already gone wrong or a project’s on a deadline — not exactly a calm moment to vet a contractor. So we put together the same short list we’d use if we were the ones hiring. Ask these five questions and you’ll separate the pros from the risk in about two minutes.

What should I ask before hiring an electrician in the Twin Cities?

Ask five things: Are you a licensed, bonded, and insured Minnesota electrical contractor? Will you pull the permit and schedule the inspection? Is the quote fixed and in writing? Who actually does the work? And do you warranty it? A trustworthy electrician answers all five without flinching. Here’s why each one matters — and how we answer them.
Ask this Why it matters Three Rivers Electric
Are you licensed, bonded & insured in MN? Your protection if anything goes wrong Yes — license EA761814
Will you pull the permit & schedule inspection? Unpermitted work bites at resale & on claims Always — included
Is the quote fixed and in writing? No open-ended “time & materials” surprises Written proposal on site
Who actually does the work? Some firms quietly subcontract it out Our own licensed crew
Do you warranty the work? Real accountability after the truck leaves Yes — we stand behind it

“Licensed, bonded, and insured” — what it actually means

These three words get repeated so often they start to sound like filler, so here’s the plain version. Licensed means the state has verified the contractor’s training and testing — you can confirm any Minnesota license through the Department of Labor and Industry. Bonded means there’s a financial backstop if work is left unfinished or done improperly. Insured means their liability coverage — not your homeowner’s policy — pays if something is damaged. If a contractor gets cagey when you ask for a license number, that’s your answer.

Always get it in writing

A real quote is fixed, itemized, and on paper (or in your inbox) before work starts. “We’ll just bill you time and materials” can be fine for a tiny repair, but on a project it’s how a $4,000 job becomes a $7,000 job with a shrug. We give you a written proposal on site so the number you approve is the number you pay, barring something genuinely unforeseen behind a wall — and if that happens, you hear about it before we proceed, not after.

Red flags to walk away from

No license number when you ask · “Cash only, no permit needed” · Door-to-door pressure and today-only pricing · A vague verbal estimate instead of a written quote · A large deposit demanded before any work begins · Can’t tell you who’s actually doing the job.
Any one of these is a reason to keep looking. The “no permit needed” line is an especially common one, and it’s exactly the thing that comes back to haunt you when you sell the house or file a claim.

Green flags you want to see

A license number offered freely · Pulls permits and schedules inspections as a matter of course · A clear, written, fixed quote · Their own licensed crew doing the work · Real, recent reviews from local customers · Answers your questions in plain English without making you feel dumb.

Why hiring local actually matters here

The Twin Cities have their own rhythm — Xcel coordination for service work, Minnesota’s 2023 code, and an old, mixed housing stock where a 1920s bungalow and a 1990s build need very different things. A local electrician has done all of it before and is still around next year if you need the warranty. There’s also the simple matter of being able to reach a real person who remembers your house.

A little about Three Rivers Electric

We’re a family-run Twin Cities electrical contractor based in Saint Paul Park, founded on decades of hands-on experience — our roots in the trade go back to 1977. We do our own work with our own licensed crew, quote in writing, pull the permits, and stand behind what we install. If that’s the kind of electrician you’re looking for, we’d be glad to earn the job.
Comparing electricians for a Twin Cities project? Get a clear, written quote and straight answers to all five questions.
Get Your Free Written Quote

Hiring an electrician FAQ

How do I check if an electrician is licensed in Minnesota?You can verify any Minnesota electrical contractor's license through the Department of Labor and Industry's online license lookup. Ask for the license number up front — a legitimate contractor will give it without hesitation. Ours is EA761814.
Should an electrician give me a written quote before starting?Yes, for any real project. A written, fixed quote tells you exactly what you're paying and what's included, and it protects you from open-ended "time and materials" surprises. We provide a written proposal on site before any installation work begins.
Do I need a licensed electrician, or can a handyman do it?For anything beyond swapping a like-for-like fixture, you want a licensed electrical contractor. In Minnesota, most electrical work requires a permit and inspection that a handyman can't legally pull, and unpermitted work can void insurance and complicate a home sale.
What's a fair deposit for electrical work?A modest deposit on a larger materials-heavy job is normal, but be cautious of anyone demanding a large chunk of the total up front before work starts. Reputable local electricians don't need big prepayments to fund your project.
Are the cheapest electricians usually a good deal?Not always. The lowest bid sometimes skips the permit, uses the minimum-code approach, or subcontracts the work out. It's worth comparing what's actually included — permit, inspection, quality of materials, warranty — not just the bottom-line number.
Do you offer free estimates?Yes — estimates on installation and project work are free. In-home troubleshooting, where we diagnose an existing problem, is a flat $195, with no trip charge for sites in our service area.