1.Scheid Electric
22180 S Scotland Ct Ste 111, Queen Creek, AZ 85142, USA
Editorial by Andre Caçador, Founder of Hero365 · Sources: Google Places · Last updated Jul 12, 2026
22180 S Scotland Ct Ste 111, Queen Creek, AZ 85142, USA
21028 S 220th Pl, Queen Creek, AZ 85142, USA
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26020 S Valencia Ave, Queen Creek, AZ 85142, USA
7401 S Power Rd, Queen Creek, AZ 85142, USA
Service calls and diagnostics typically run $85-175 for the first hour, which is a bit higher than the Phoenix core average because of drive time to Queen Creek's spread-out lots. A standard panel upgrade (100A to 200A) runs $1,800-3,800 depending on whether SRP or APS needs to coordinate a meter change. Whole-house rewires on older homes near San Tan or the historic downtown area run $3,500-9,000+. EV charger installs (Level 2, 240V) run $600-1,600, and that range moves depending on how far the charger sits from your existing panel — common on Queen Creek's larger lots. Ceiling fans, outlet additions, and GFCI upgrades usually land $150-400 per item. Pool and spa equipment circuits, common on Queen Creek properties, run $300-900 depending on bonding and GFCI requirements. Always get 2-3 quotes; a $1,200 spread on a panel job isn't unusual once you factor in permit handling and utility coordination.
Start by confirming they hold an active Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) license in the correct classification — C-11 for residential electrical. You can look up license status and any complaint history directly on the ROC's public database (azroc.gov). Ask whether they pull their own permits with the Town of Queen Creek Building Safety Division or expect you to; reputable electricians pull permits themselves for panel work, subpanels, and service upgrades. Ask which utility, SRP or APS, they've coordinated meter work with recently — Queen Creek sits across both territories, and an electrician unfamiliar with one utility's shutdown/reconnect process can add days to your timeline. For solar-adjacent work, ask if they've handled interconnection paperwork, since that's a common add-on request here. Get everything — scope, materials, permit responsibility, timeline — in writing before work starts.
Arizona licenses electrical contractors through the Registrar of Contractors (ROC), which requires a C-11 (electrical) license, bonding, and proof of workers' comp coverage for anyone pulling permits or advertising licensed work. For permitting, Queen Creek is an incorporated town with its own Building Safety Division, so most residential electrical permits (panel upgrades, new circuits, service changes) go through the Town of Queen Creek, not Maricopa or Pinal County directly — even though the town straddles both counties. Permit turnaround has been running roughly 1-3 weeks for standard residential electrical as of 2026, longer during peak new-construction inspection backlogs. Skipping the permit on a panel upgrade is a real risk here: it can void your homeowner's insurance claim on an electrical fire and becomes a disclosure problem at resale, which matters given how many Queen Creek homes turn over within a few years of construction.
Monsoon season (roughly June through September) brings dust storms and lightning strikes that cause voltage surges and outages across Queen Creek's grid — surge protection at the panel level is a common and reasonable ask, not an upsell. Extreme summer heat pushes AC compressor circuits hard; repeated breaker trips in July and August are often a sign of an undersized circuit or aging breaker, not just 'the heat.' Many Queen Creek properties are horse properties or larger residential lots with detached garages, workshops, or barns that need subpanels run underground — this work requires trenching permits and proper conduit depth per code, which not every general electrician handles regularly. Pool and spa bonding/GFCI compliance is another recurring issue given how common pools are on Queen Creek lots. Rooftop solar is also widespread here, and older solar installs sometimes weren't inspected to current interconnection standards — worth a check if you're buying an existing solar-equipped home.
Queen Creek is unusual in that it's served by two different utilities depending on which part of town you're in — Salt River Project (SRP) and Arizona Public Service (APS). This affects your electrician's job directly: meter upgrades, service disconnects for panel work, and net-metering paperwork for solar all go through whichever utility serves your specific address, and the process, forms, and typical wait times differ between the two. Before hiring, confirm your electrician knows which utility serves your property (check a recent bill if you're unsure) and has direct experience scheduling that utility's disconnect/reconnect crew — this is one of the most common causes of multi-day delays on panel upgrade projects in Queen Creek.
Minor like-for-like replacements (swapping a fixture, replacing an outlet) generally don't require a permit. Adding new circuits, upgrading a panel, installing a subpanel, or any work touching your service entrance does require a permit through the Town of Queen Creek Building Safety Division. When in doubt, ask your electrician directly — a licensed C-11 contractor should know the line without hesitation.
Expect $1,800-3,800 for a standard 100A-to-200A upgrade, including permit fees. Costs run higher if SRP or APS needs to schedule a meter change or if your existing panel location requires relocation to meet current clearance code — common in older homes near downtown Queen Creek. Get quotes from at least two contractors since utility coordination time is often quoted differently.
Yes, and it's a relatively low-cost add-on — whole-house surge protectors typically run $250-600 installed. Given how many outages and voltage spikes hit the East Valley during monsoon season (June-September), it's one of the more cost-effective upgrades, especially if you have solar equipment or smart-home devices sensitive to power fluctuations.
It can be either an HVAC issue or an electrical one. A breaker that trips repeatedly during peak heat (typically July-August highs above 110°F) often points to an undersized circuit, an aging breaker that's lost its rated tolerance, or a failing AC capacitor drawing extra current. An electrician can test the circuit's actual load in about 30-60 minutes; if it's consistently near or over the breaker's rating, that's a wiring fix, not just an HVAC repair.
Search the contractor's name or license number on the Arizona Registrar of Contractors website (azroc.gov). You'll see license classification (look for C-11 for electrical), status, bond amount, and any complaint or disciplinary history. This takes about two minutes and is worth doing before any panel or rewiring job.
Many are, given how common rooftop solar is across the East Valley, but not all electricians handle interconnection paperwork with SRP or APS. If your project involves adding circuits to an existing solar system, battery storage, or troubleshooting an inverter-related issue, ask specifically about their solar interconnection experience rather than assuming general electrical licensing covers it.
This varies widely with trench distance and whether you need a full subpanel versus a simple circuit extension. Rough range: $1,500-5,000+ for a subpanel with trenching on a typical Queen Creek acreage lot. Get a site visit rather than a phone quote — trenching depth requirements and distance from the main panel change the number significantly.
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