Qualified electricians, full wiring safety reports








Our qualified electricians carry out full electrical inspections across Rotherham, from Moorgate and Boston Castle to Waverley and Thorpe Hesley. We test the fixed wiring, consumer unit, RCD protection, earthing and bonding, then issue a clear report based on BS 7671. Landlords in England need a valid EICR every 5 years, and a copy must reach tenants within 28 days. A failed report can lead to remedial action, local authority enforcement and penalties of up to £30,000 per breach.
Rotherham's housing stock makes electrical testing a practical safeguard, not a box-tick. homedata.co.uk records show an average house price of £179,812 in December 2024, with detached homes at £319,454 and flats at £109,616, while the Private Rented Sector accounted for 15.3% of households in 2021. The borough also has 26 Conservation Areas and 520 Listed Buildings, so our team often finds older consumer units, legacy wiring and mixed upgrades in homes that have been adapted over time. That mix is exactly where an EICR matters.

A proper EICR is not a quick glance at a fuse board. Our electricians inspect the consumer unit, check circuit breakers and RCDs, and test whether the installation is still safe for continued use. We also look at earthing and bonding, socket outlets, light fittings and fixed wiring throughout the property, because faults often sit where you cannot see them. In Rotherham terraces near Parkgate or older homes in Boston Castle ward, hidden wiring changes can be more revealing than a neat front cover on the fuse box.
Testing includes insulation resistance, continuity, polarity and external earth loop impedance. Those readings tell us if the wiring can carry current safely, if protective devices will operate as intended and if earthing arrangements are doing their job. We also check for signs of heat damage, loose connections and poor workmanship, which are common causes of future faults. In homes near the River Don flood warning areas, where damp can accelerate corrosion, the practical risk can be higher than the visible damage suggests.

Landlords in Rotherham need to treat the EICR as a legal duty, not optional maintenance. The Electrical Safety Standards in the Private Rented Sector (England) Regulations 2020 require a valid report at least every 5 years, or sooner if the electrician recommends it. A copy must be given to existing tenants within 28 days, and new tenants should receive it before they move in. That rule applies across the borough, from the town centre to newer schemes such as Poppy Fields, Moorgate Boulevard and Sorby Park in Waverley S60 8EA.
Local housing conditions make the inspection more relevant. Rotherham had 265,807 residents and 113,925 households at the 2021 Census, with a population density of 927.7 people/km2, and the Private Rented Sector made up 15.3% of households, up from 11.3% in 2011. Owner occupation fell from 65.2% to 63.6% over the same period, which points to a sizeable managed rental market and more frequent landlord compliance checks. That matters in older terraces, converted properties and mixed-tenure streets where previous repairs may have left the wiring in a piecemeal state.
Conservation and heritage also shape the risk picture. Rotherham town centre Conservation Area contains 19 listed buildings, including 3 Grade I, 1 Grade II* and 15 Grade II, while Boston Castle ward, which includes central Rotherham and Moorgate, contains 39 listed buildings. Older stock often carries rewired extensions, obsolete accessories and consumer units that have been updated at different times. Our qualified team sees that pattern often in homes built long before modern RCD protection became standard, and the report gives landlords the evidence they need to act before a small defect becomes a breach.
EICR codes are the language of electrical risk. C1 means danger is present and immediate action is needed, while C2 means the installation is potentially dangerous and requires urgent remedial work. C3 is not a fail on its own, but it shows improvement is recommended because the installation falls short of current standards. FI means further investigation is needed before we can make a final judgement, which is common where parts of the installation are hidden behind later alterations.
A satisfactory report can still contain C3 observations, but any C1, C2 or unresolved FI item makes the overall result unsatisfactory. That distinction matters to landlords in Rotherham's older housing, especially in properties near the town centre where repeated alterations can leave mixed wiring methods in one building. A working light today is not proof that the circuit is safe. Our electricians look for what the circuit will do under fault conditions, not just what it does when everything is calm.

Choose an appointment through our booking page and tell us the property type, number of circuits and any known faults. That helps our team bring the right test equipment and plan the inspection properly.
We allocate a qualified electrician registered with a competent person scheme. They review the property details before attending, which saves time in homes with multiple consumer units or outbuildings.
The first part is a careful walk-through of the installation. We look at the consumer unit, sockets, switches, light fittings, bonding and evidence of damage, overheating or poor workmanship.
Power is turned off briefly so we can test continuity, insulation resistance and polarity. This stage shows whether the wiring behaves safely when it is isolated, which is where hidden weakness often appears.
Once power is restored, we check circuit operation, RCD performance and external earth loop impedance. These readings tell us how the installation responds under normal use and under a fault.
We send the EICR with a clear overall outcome and coded observations. If remedial work is needed, we explain what failed, what needs fixing and how the property can be brought back to a satisfactory state.
An unsatisfactory result does not always mean the wiring is unsafe everywhere, but it does mean action is needed. C1 and C2 observations must be dealt with quickly, and landlords should keep records that show the work has started and been completed in line with the report. The regulations require that remedial work and further investigative work are carried out within 28 days, or sooner if the electrician sets a shorter timescale. Once repairs are done, a written confirmation should be issued so the tenant and local authority have evidence that the problem has been fixed.
In practical terms, we often see the same patterns in Rotherham homes: a damaged socket in a terrace off Moorgate, an outdated consumer unit in a flat near the town centre, or missing bonding in a semi-detached house near Thorpe Hesley. A C1 finding can mean there is a direct shock risk, such as exposed live parts or severe overheating. A C2 may be a less obvious hazard, but it still creates an unsafe condition that could turn serious without warning. C3 items stay on the report as recommendations, which helps landlords plan future upgrades rather than react to emergencies.
Where further investigation is needed, access problems can slow the process. We may need to open up part of the installation, test a hidden junction or inspect a circuit that runs through a loft or extension. The report should then be updated once the missing information is found, so the property is not left in limbo. That record matters if you are renewing a tenancy, dealing with insurance queries or selling a rental property in one of Rotherham's conservation areas.
Homeowners do not have the same legal duty as landlords, but an EICR still gives a clear picture of the wiring condition. For many properties, a test every 10 years is sensible, and older homes may need one every 5 years if the installation is tired or has had repeated alterations. That advice is especially relevant in Rotherham, where a lot of the housing stock is older and the borough has 26 Conservation Areas plus 520 Listed Buildings. An electrical safety certificate search usually points people towards the right report, and the EICR is the document that matters.
Local property age and build type matter. Rotherham's newer schemes such as Sorby Park in Waverley S60 8EA, Wentworth View in Thorpe Hesley S61 2PL and Poppy Fields on the edges of Rotherham are likely to have modern wiring, but that does not remove the need for periodic checks. Older homes, including properties in the town centre conservation area or near Boston Castle ward, may have upgrades layered over legacy circuits. Clay soils, mining subsidence history and damp conditions can also lead to movement or moisture problems, which is why cable routes, consumer units and accessories deserve a proper inspection before you buy, sell or refurbish.
An EICR also helps when you are preparing a sale. Buyers often ask about the state of the electrical installation, especially where the house has been extended, converted or rewired in stages. homedata.co.uk records show detached homes in Rotherham at £319,454 in December 2024, so a report is a modest check against a large asset. If the inspection finds no serious defects, you can move forward with more confidence. If it does find issues, you can price the work before the chain starts to wobble.

Yes. Landlords in England must have a valid EICR at least every 5 years, and the report must be shared with tenants within 28 days. If the property is newly let, the tenant should receive it before moving in. Our electricians also check whether the report recommends an earlier review, which can happen in older Rotherham homes or properties with known faults.
Our EICR prices start from £120 in Rotherham. The final cost depends on the property size, number of circuits, how easy it is to access the consumer unit and whether the installation is older or has been altered. A flat with one consumer unit will usually take less time than a larger house with extensions, loft rooms or outbuildings.
For most rented homes, the legal interval is every 5 years. Homeowners usually book one every 10 years, though older properties can need earlier testing if the wiring is worn or if the last report recommended it. In Rotherham, homes in the town centre conservation area or in older terraces may need closer attention because the electrical history is often more complicated.
A failed EICR means there is at least one C1, C2 or unresolved FI observation. Landlords need to arrange the remedial work, then keep the written confirmation with the report once the faults are fixed. If the property is let and the issue is ignored, the local authority can take enforcement action and the penalty can reach £30,000 per breach.
Most inspections take 2-4 hours, depending on the size of the property and the number of circuits. A small flat in Rotherham may be quicker, while a larger detached home or a property with several additions can take longer. We need brief access to sockets, light fittings, the consumer unit and any accessible outbuildings or extensions.
C1 means danger is present and immediate action is needed. C2 means the installation is potentially dangerous and needs urgent repair, while C3 is an improvement recommendation rather than a fail. C1 and C2 make the overall report unsatisfactory, but C3 can still appear on a satisfactory report if nothing more serious is found.
Yes, especially if the property has been altered after completion or if an insurer, agent or mortgage lender asks for proof of condition. New-build homes at places like Moorgate Boulevard or Poppy Fields should have modern wiring, but additions such as sheds, EV chargers or later kitchen changes can create separate risks. An EICR checks the whole installation as it stands now, not just the day it was handed over.
The report must be carried out by a qualified person registered with a competent person scheme. Our electricians use the correct test equipment, follow BS 7671 and issue observations in the standard EICR format. That gives landlords and homeowners a clear, recognised document they can use for compliance, insurance or resale.
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EICR prices in Rotherham start from £120, and the final fee depends on what we are testing. A compact flat with a standard consumer unit is usually quicker than a four-bedroom house with multiple circuits, a garage supply and garden lighting. Older installations also take more time because the electrician has to check for legacy wiring methods, missing labels and previous repairs that were made in stages. That extra time is what drives the price, not the postcode alone.
Rotherham's house values give that cost some context. homedata.co.uk records put the borough's average house price at £179,812 in December 2024, with semi-detached homes at £190,900 and terraced homes at £135,707. Against those figures, a safety report is a relatively small spend, especially if it prevents a remedial bill later. Our electricians price the inspection on the property in front of us, not on a generic template, which is why two homes on the same street can land at different fees.
The report itself is focused and practical. We test the wiring, issue the coded findings and explain any unsafe points in plain language, so you know what needs action and what only needs monitoring. If remedial work is required, we quote separately after the inspection, which keeps the EICR price clear from the repair cost. Most customers use the report as a decision tool for letting, buying, selling or updating a rental, and that is exactly how it should work.
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Qualified electricians, full wiring safety reports
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Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.