1 top-rated electricians ranked by verified reviews and local trust.
Electrical work in Old Town Temecula operates on different terms than in the surrounding tract neighborhoods.
The commercial corridors along Front Street and Main Street are lined with rehabilitated older buildings where aging wiring, undersized panels, and outdated service entrances are routine findings. Restaurants running commercial kitchen equipment, HVAC loads, and POS systems regularly push original infrastructure to its limits — and on busy tourist weekends, an emergency call at 6 p.m. Saturday demands faster turnaround than most operators plan for. Upper-floor apartments and mixed-use residential units add another layer: panel upgrades, EV charger installs in older garages, and smart-home wiring for residents who need modern capacity from pre-modern electrical systems.
Useful questions sharpen the comparison. Ask whether a candidate has pulled permits for commercial rehab work in historic buildings — load calculations for expanding restaurant equipment differ meaningfully from new-construction tract work. Verify a valid C-10 license and current general liability coverage before any commercial job proceeds. Short turnaround on emergency response is a legitimate differentiator here, not a bonus.
Rankings reflect verified reviews, demonstrated experience with Old Town's building stock, and emergency responsiveness. No business paid for placement.
The best electricians in Old Town Temecula are Pro Circuit Electric.
Best Electricians in Old Town Temecula
Top of Temecula
California law requires contractors to hold a valid license from the Contractors State License Board (CSLB). You can verify any contractor's license status at cslb.ca.gov. For the Temecula Valley specifically, look for contractors who have experience with the area's hard water issues, HOA requirements (especially in Redhawk, Harveston, and Wolf Creek), and the building codes specific to Riverside County. Always get at least two written estimates, confirm they carry general liability insurance, and check whether they pull their own permits. Response time matters for emergency work — the best local contractors can typically respond same-day for urgent issues.
Rankings by Top of Temecula are based on verified reviews from Google Maps and Yelp, response time, local experience, and licensing status. We also factor in profile completeness and off-platform corroboration across multiple review sources. We do not accept payment for organic rankings — businesses with a "Verified" badge have claimed their listing but are ranked by the same criteria as everyone else.
Each business receives a Top of Temecula confidence score based on review volume and quality, profile completeness, and how well they fit the specific Old Town Temecula area. The top 1 businesses shown here are the highest-scoring active listings in this category across 1 total verified reviews. Businesses that have not yet been verified by our team are still eligible for ranking but may show limited profile information.
Last updated after reviewing 1 verified reviews. Sources include Google Maps and Yelp review data.
Electricians in the Temecula area charge customers $50-$130 per hour for service calls, with most jobs carrying a $100-$200 service call fee that covers the first hour (per HomeGuide 2026 data). Rates are higher for emergency, weekend, or after-hours work. For larger projects like panel upgrades or EV charger installs, most electricians quote a flat rate rather than hourly.
Southern California Edison (SCE) is the electricity provider for Old Town Temecula and the entire Temecula Valley. SCE handles power delivery, metering, and outage response. There is a local SCE office at 27450 Ynez Road, Suite 124 in Temecula. For solar installations, your electrician coordinates the net metering application with SCE. Natural gas is provided by SoCalGas.
A Level 2 EV charger installation in Old Town Temecula costs $1,200-$2,500 for a standard setup (charger hardware $300-$1,000 plus 4-8 hours of labor). If your electrical panel needs an upgrade, add $800-$2,000. California offers up to $2,000 in combined state incentives, and a federal tax credit covers 30% of costs up to $1,000 (available through July 2026). Title 24 requirements in 2026 may add $300-$500 for compliance.
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