1.S&H Remodel and Maintenance
42188 W Noreen Rd, Maricopa, AZ 85138, USA
Editorial by Andre Caçador, Founder of Hero365 · Sources: Google Places · Last updated Jul 12, 2026
42188 W Noreen Rd, Maricopa, AZ 85138, USA
45112 W Desert Garden Rd, Maricopa, AZ 85139, USA
45102 W Edwards Cir, Maricopa, AZ 85139, USA
45373 W Norris Rd, Maricopa, AZ 85139, USA
18486 N Smith Dr, Maricopa, AZ 85139, USA
41292 W James Ln, Maricopa, AZ 85138, USA
41989 W Kennedy Ct, Maricopa, AZ 85138, USA
Service calls typically run $75–$150 for the trip plus diagnostic time, with hourly rates in the $85–$160 range across the Phoenix-Maricopa metro — consistent with statewide averages reported by Angi and HomeAdvisor for the Phoenix market. A standard panel upgrade to 200A runs $1,800–$3,500 depending on whether it's a straight swap or requires a service mast relocation. Because many Maricopa homes were built with 150A or 200A panels already, full rewires are rare; more common is adding dedicated circuits for pool pumps, spa equipment, RV hookups, or a detached casita, which usually lands between $600–$2,000 per circuit depending on trench length and panel distance. EV charger installs run $500–$1,800, with the top end reflecting homes where the panel is already near capacity from solar or a pool. Solar-related electrical work (interconnection, battery backup wiring, rapid shutdown compliance) is its own category — expect $1,500–$4,000 on top of the panel install itself. Always get 2–3 quotes; Maricopa's growth has pulled in both experienced local crews and out-of-town outfits, and pricing spread is wider here than in more established markets.
Ask for their Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) license number and look it up yourself at azroc.gov before you sign anything — this takes two minutes and tells you if there are open complaints or bond issues. In a market growing as fast as Maricopa's, licensed crews are often booked out 1–2 weeks in summer, so be wary of anyone who can start same-day for anything beyond a simple repair; that's sometimes a sign of unlicensed handyman work being passed off as licensed electrical. Confirm they carry general liability insurance and, if the work involves your main panel or service entrance, that they'll pull a permit through the City of Maricopa Building Safety Division rather than skip it. For solar or battery work specifically, ask whether they've done interconnection paperwork with Electrical District No. 3 (ED3) before — it's a smaller, cooperative-style utility and its process differs from APS or SRP, so experience with ED3 specifically matters.
Electrical contractors in Arizona are licensed through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC), which handles both licensing and consumer complaints statewide — there's no separate city-level electrical license. Per ROC rules, any electrical job valued over $1,000 in combined labor and materials legally requires a licensed contractor; below that, a limited handyman exemption applies, but panel work, new circuits, and anything touching your service entrance almost always exceeds that threshold anyway. For permits, the City of Maricopa's Building Safety Division reviews and issues electrical permits for work inside city limits — panel upgrades, sub-panels, and new circuits to detached structures typically require one. Skipping the permit can create real problems later: unpermitted panel work is a common issue that surfaces during home resale inspections in newer Maricopa subdivisions, since buyers' inspectors now routinely check permit history with the city.
Arizona attics regularly hit 140–160°F in July and August, and that heat degrades wire insulation and breaker performance faster than in milder climates — it's a real factor even in homes built after 2010. Combine that with AC units running near-constantly for five months a year, and dedicated AC circuits and breakers take more wear here than almost anywhere else in the country. Monsoon season (roughly June through September) brings dust storms and sudden voltage surges from grid switching during storms, which is why whole-house surge protection at the panel is a common — and worthwhile — add-on for Maricopa homeowners, usually $200–$500 installed. Because so much of Maricopa was built in master-planned communities (Province, Rancho El Dorado, Homestead, and others), HOA rules sometimes affect exterior work like EV charger conduit routing or solar panel visibility — worth checking before scheduling anything that changes your home's exterior.
Yes. The City of Maricopa Building Safety Division requires a permit for panel upgrades, service changes, and most new circuit installations. A licensed electrician working in Maricopa should pull this for you as part of the job — if a contractor suggests skipping it, that's a red flag, since unpermitted panel work commonly shows up as a problem during resale inspections in newer subdivisions.
Most of Maricopa is served by Electrical District No. 3 (ED3), a public power provider distinct from APS or SRP, which serve nearby Phoenix suburbs. ED3's interconnection application and net metering process differ from the bigger utilities, so ask any solar or battery installer specifically whether they've handled ED3 paperwork before — it affects timeline and can add weeks if your installer is unfamiliar with the process.
Expect $85–$160 per hour, plus a $75–$150 service call fee, roughly in line with Phoenix-metro averages reported by Angi and HomeAdvisor. Simple repairs (outlet swap, breaker replacement) often fall under a flat rate instead of hourly billing — ask upfront which pricing model applies.
Not really — this is a meaningful difference from older Phoenix or Tucson neighborhoods. Most of Maricopa was built after 2000, well past the 1960s–70s era when aluminum branch wiring was common, so that specific hazard is rare here. The more common issue in Maricopa is heat-stressed insulation in attic runs and undersized circuits for add-ons like pools, spas, and casitas that weren't part of the original build.
Typically $500–$1,800 installed, with the lower end for homes with panel capacity to spare and the higher end for homes needing a subpanel or panel upgrade first — common in houses that already run pool equipment and central AC on the same panel. Get a load calculation done before committing to a quote; this is the single biggest driver of final cost.
Given Maricopa's monsoon season (June–September) and the grid-switching surges that come with it, most local electricians recommend it, and it's relatively cheap — $200–$500 installed at the panel. It won't stop a direct lightning strike but does protect against the more common voltage spikes from storm-related grid events.
Search their name or license number directly at azroc.gov, the Arizona Registrar of Contractors' public database. It shows license status, bond information, and any complaint history — worth the two minutes before any job over $1,000, which is the threshold at which Arizona law requires a licensed contractor rather than an unlicensed handyman.
They can. Many Maricopa neighborhoods (Province, Rancho El Dorado, Homestead, and others) are HOA-governed, and some have architectural review requirements for anything visible on the exterior, including conduit runs or solar panel placement. Check your HOA's rules before scheduling exterior electrical work — it's rarely a blocker, but it can add a review step to your timeline.
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