1.Light Up Electric LLC
31220 N Saddlebag Ln, San Tan Valley, AZ 85143, USA
Editorial by Andre Caçador, Founder of Hero365 · Sources: Google Places · Last updated Jul 12, 2026
31220 N Saddlebag Ln, San Tan Valley, AZ 85143, USA
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Rates track the greater Phoenix metro fairly closely since most licensed electricians serving San Tan Valley also work Queen Creek, Gilbert, and San Tan proper. Expect a service call/diagnostic fee of $75–$150, with hourly rates typically $80–$160 depending on the company and whether it's a service tech or a licensed master electrician. A standard panel upgrade (100A to 200A) runs $1,800–$3,800; if you're adding capacity for a pool, EV charger, and solar simultaneously, that can push toward $4,500–$6,000. EV charger installs (Level 2, NEMA 14-50 or hardwired) run $750–$1,800 depending on run length from the panel — many San Tan Valley garages are on the far side of the house from the main panel, which adds conduit cost. Whole-house rewires on older manufactured or site-built homes range $4,000–$14,000 depending on square footage and attic access. Ceiling fan or fixture swaps are usually $150–$350 per fixture. Because so much of San Tan Valley is newer construction, straightforward troubleshooting calls (breaker trips, dead outlets) tend to run cheaper here than in older Phoenix neighborhoods — often $150–$350 all-in — since access isn't fighting 1970s wiring. Always get 2–3 quotes; solar-adjacent work in particular has wide price variance depending on whether the electrician is also solar-certified.
First, confirm the license is active through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors (azroc.gov) — search by name or license number, and check for any complaint history or bond claims. Ask specifically which contractor classification they hold: CR-11 is the general electrical classification, but if you need solar interconnection work, you want someone who's also done SRP or utility-adjacent inspections, since San Tan Valley sits at the edge of SRP and Trico Electric Cooperative territory depending on the subdivision — an electrician unfamiliar with your specific utility's interconnection paperwork will slow your project down. Second, ask whether they pull their own permits through Pinal County or expect you to. A contractor who routinely handles Pinal County permitting will know the inspector schedule and won't leave you guessing on timelines, which in a fast-growing area with backed-up inspection queues actually matters. Third, for panel or service upgrades, ask if they carry E&O insurance in addition to the standard liability/bond — panel work touching the meter can occasionally trip utility disconnection delays, and you want someone who documents the job properly. Get itemized quotes, not lump sums, especially for anything involving trenching or conduit runs across a large desert lot, since lot sizes here run bigger than inner-Phoenix parcels and trenching costs add up fast.
Because San Tan Valley is unincorporated, there's no city building department — permits for electrical work go through the Pinal County Building Safety Department, not a city office. Any panel upgrade, service change, new circuit for a pool or spa, or EV charger installation typically requires a permit and inspection; simple like-for-like fixture replacement usually doesn't. Contractor licensing itself is handled at the state level by the Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) — verify any electrician's license number, bond, and classification at azroc.gov before signing anything. Arizona is one of the stricter states about unlicensed work: per ROC, hiring an unlicensed contractor for work over $1,000 forfeits your access to the Residual Recovery Fund if something goes wrong, so licensing verification isn't a formality here, it's your financial backstop. If your project involves solar panel interconnection, expect an additional review step from your utility (SRP or Trico Electric Cooperative, depending on which part of San Tan Valley you're in) on top of the county permit.
The biggest one is heat-driven load: with summer highs regularly over 105°F and AC units running near-constantly from May through September, panels and outdoor disconnects in San Tan Valley take more thermal stress than in milder climates, and undersized or aging AC disconnects are a frequent service call. Second is the sheer number of solar installations — Arizona ranks near the top nationally for residential solar adoption per the Solar Energy Industries Association, and San Tan Valley's newer subdivisions have high uptake. Poorly integrated solar-plus-panel setups from the original installer are a common source of tripped breakers and inverter faults years later. Third, monsoon season (roughly June–September) brings dust storms and lightning that can cause voltage surges — homes without whole-house surge protection see more fried electronics and nuisance breaker trips during storm season. Fourth, because so much of the area was built fast during 2005–2020 boom cycles, builder-grade panels are common — perfectly code-compliant but often at minimum capacity, meaning homeowners adding a pool, workshop, or EV charger later frequently need a service upgrade sooner than they expect.
Generally yes if it involves a dedicated circuit or panel work — Pinal County requires an electrical permit for new circuits and service upgrades. A licensed electrician handling the install will typically pull this for you. Skipping the permit can cause problems later at resale or with insurance claims if there's ever an electrical fire.
Go to azroc.gov and search their license lookup tool by contractor name or license number. It shows license status, classification (CR-11 for electrical), bond information, and any complaint or disciplinary history. This takes about two minutes and is the single best fraud-prevention step before hiring anyone.
Monsoon storms (June–September) bring voltage surges from lightning strikes and grid fluctuations, plus dust intrusion into outdoor panels and disconnects. If trips are frequent, have an electrician check your AC disconnect and consider whole-house surge protection — a relatively cheap addition ($200–$500 installed) that pays for itself after one fried appliance.
Yes. Ask specifically whether the electrician has experience with solar interconnection and inverter troubleshooting, not just general residential wiring. Given Arizona's high solar adoption rate, many San Tan Valley electricians do this regularly, but not all — and utility interconnection paperwork (SRP or Trico Electric Cooperative depending on your subdivision) adds a step that inexperienced contractors sometimes mishandle.
Yes — San Tan Valley is unincorporated, so inspections and permits go through Pinal County Building Safety, not a city department. Queen Creek and Gilbert, being incorporated towns, run their own permitting offices. If your contractor primarily works in those cities, confirm they're also familiar with Pinal County's specific process and inspector scheduling, which can run on a different timeline.
Combining a pool circuit, EV charger circuit, and a service upgrade to 200A typically runs $4,500–$6,500 in the San Tan Valley area, depending on trenching distance and panel location. Doing it all in one project is usually cheaper than three separate service calls, since permitting and inspection can often be consolidated.
Some of the area's older manufactured and mobile homes (pre-1990s) can have aluminum branch wiring or undersized panels that don't meet current code for modern loads like central AC or EV chargers. If you're buying or renovating one, it's worth having an electrician do a panel and wiring assessment before assuming standard circuit work will suffice.
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