1.Static Sun Electric & Solar
19033 S Arizona Ave U1, Chandler, AZ 85286, USA
Editorial by Andre Caçador, Founder of Hero365 · Sources: Google Places · Last updated Jul 12, 2026
19033 S Arizona Ave U1, Chandler, AZ 85286, USA
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Licensed Chandler electricians typically bill $85-$175/hour, with service calls and diagnostics often starting at a $75-$150 flat trip fee. A standard panel upgrade (100A to 200A), common in older Chandler neighborhoods like Carriage Estates or Chandler Village, runs $1,800-$4,200 depending on whether the meter socket and grounding also need updating. EV charger installs (Level 2, 240V) generally cost $600-$1,800 — the wide range depends on how far the run is from your panel and whether SRP requires a service upgrade for the added load. Whole-house rewires on older homes run roughly $4-$9 per square foot. Ceiling fan or fixture installs are usually $150-$350 each. Pool equipment circuits, common given how many Chandler homes have pools, run $400-$900 depending on bonding and GFCI requirements. Solar-related electrical work (subpanel, rapid shutdown compliance) typically adds $1,000-$3,000 on top of the solar installer's quote. These are regional ranges pulled from Arizona-wide contractor cost data; get 2-3 local quotes before committing, since permit fees, panel brand availability, and crawlspace vs. slab access all move the number.
Start by confirming an active Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) license — you can verify license status, bond, and any complaint history directly at azroc.gov using the contractor's name or license number. For anything touching your main panel, service entrance, or a new circuit for EV/solar, ask specifically whether they pull permits through the City of Chandler Building Safety Division; unpermitted panel work is one of the most common issues that surfaces during home resale inspections here. Ask how they handle SRP or APS coordination for service upgrades — Chandler is served primarily by Salt River Project (SRP), and disconnect/reconnect scheduling can add days if the electrician isn't used to that process. For older homes, ask directly whether they've worked with aluminum branch wiring or legacy panel brands (Zinsco, Federal Pacific, Challenger) still found in some 1960s-70s Chandler tract homes — these require specific remediation approaches, not a simple breaker swap. Get a written scope with the panel/breaker brand specified, not just 'panel upgrade.' And ask about warranty on labor separate from parts — 1-2 years labor is standard among established Valley electricians.
All electrical contractors working in Arizona must hold a license from the Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC), which requires proof of insurance, bonding, and a trade exam. You can look up any contractor's license number, bond amount, and complaint/disciplinary history at azroc.gov before hiring — this is the single most useful five-minute check a homeowner can do. Within Chandler city limits, most electrical work beyond simple fixture swaps — panel changes, new circuits, service upgrades, EV charger installs, solar interconnection — requires a permit through the City of Chandler Building Safety Division, with inspections tied to Chandler's adopted version of the National Electrical Code (currently the 2020 NEC with local amendments). Permit turnaround is typically same-day to a few business days for straightforward residential work when submitted electronically through the city's portal. If your contractor tells you a panel upgrade or subpanel install doesn't need a permit, that's a red flag — it usually does, and unpermitted work can complicate insurance claims or resale disclosures later.
Heat is the dominant factor. Attic temperatures in Chandler regularly exceed 150°F in July and August, which accelerates insulation breakdown on older wiring and stresses AC-dedicated circuits and disconnects mounted outdoors in direct sun. Homes built before the mid-1970s in central Chandler sometimes still have aluminum branch circuit wiring, which requires specific connectors (AlumiConn or COPALUM) rather than a straight swap to avoid overheating at outlets and switches. Monsoon season (roughly June through September) brings voltage surges and occasional lightning-related damage to panels, garage door openers, and pool equipment — whole-home surge protection at the panel is a common and relatively affordable ($250-$500) upgrade many Chandler electricians recommend before monsoon season each year. Newer developments (Ocotillo, Sun Groves, south Chandler) generally have modern 200A service but frequently need a load calculation before adding an EV charger or pool heat pump, since builder-installed panels were sized for the original appliance mix. Rodent damage to attic wiring, from pack rats and other desert wildlife nesting in cooler crawlspaces, is also a recurring service call across the Valley.
Demand for Chandler electricians spikes twice a year: right before summer (April-May, as homeowners get AC circuits and surge protection checked ahead of peak heat) and again in fall when solar and EV installations pick up after monsoon season ends. If you need non-emergency work done, booking in the shoulder months of October-November or February-March generally gets you faster scheduling and more competitive quotes than calling in the middle of July.
Yes. Panel upgrades require a permit through the City of Chandler Building Safety Division and an inspection against the city's adopted NEC edition. Most licensed electricians handle the permit filing as part of the job, but confirm this in writing before work starts — unpermitted panel work is a common issue flagged during home sales in Chandler.
Go to azroc.gov and search by the company or individual's name. The Arizona Registrar of Contractors lets you verify license status, bond amount, license classification (residential vs. commercial), and any filed complaints. This takes about five minutes and is worth doing before any electrical work over a few hundred dollars.
Typically $600-$1,800 for a Level 2 240V charger, depending on the distance from your panel and whether your existing service can handle the added load without an upgrade. Homes with older 100A panels in central Chandler more often need a service upgrade first, which adds $1,800-$4,000. SRP, which serves most of Chandler, also offers time-of-use EV charging rate plans worth asking your electrician about.
Possibly. Homes in older Chandler neighborhoods built before the mid-1970s sometimes have aluminum branch wiring or legacy panel brands like Zinsco or Federal Pacific, both associated with higher fire risk per insurance industry data. Ask an electrician to inspect the panel and a sample of outlets; remediation (not necessarily a full rewire) is often possible and typically runs $1,500-$5,000 depending on scope.
Voltage sags and surges during monsoon season (June-September) are common across the Phoenix metro due to lightning strikes on the grid and wind-related line issues. If flickering is frequent or accompanied by burning smells, have an electrician check your panel and grounding — and consider whole-home surge protection, generally $250-$500 installed, before next monsoon season.
Pool equipment circuits, bonding, and GFCI protection typically run $400-$900 for standard equipment pads. Adding a pool heater or larger pump may require a separate load calculation and possibly a subpanel, which can push costs to $1,500-$3,000. This work requires a permit and inspection through the City of Chandler regardless of pool size.
Most of Chandler is served by Salt River Project (SRP), though a small portion falls under Arizona Public Service (APS) territory depending on the neighborhood. Your electrician should confirm which utility serves your address before scheduling any service upgrade, since coordination timelines and net metering rules for solar differ between the two.
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