Emergency Electrician in Kensington and Chelsea
29 qualified electricians available for emergency electrician in Kensington and Chelsea, London. Upfront pricing, book online.
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29 electricians for emergency electrician in Kensington and Chelsea
ALB Projects and Electrics Ltd
Kensington and Chelsea, SW10 0EB
All-ElectricUK Limited
Kensington and Chelsea, SW5 9UP
Andy George
Kensington and Chelsea, W11 4PF
Arches Engineering Ltd
Kensington and Chelsea, SW10 9EU
Arleno LTD
Kensington and Chelsea, SW7 2HQ
ARM London Limited
Kensington and Chelsea, W10 4RA
ATELMEC ENGINEERING LTD
Kensington and Chelsea, W2 4TJ
C B Electrics Ltd
Kensington and Chelsea, W10 6EF
Chris Colborne Electrical and Fire
Kensington and Chelsea, SW1W 8NH
Electrical 999 Limited
Kensington and Chelsea, W11 3LB
Electrical Facilities Ltd
Kensington and Chelsea, SW3 5BE
Erli Perdhiku
Kensington and Chelsea, W10 5HS
Four Horizons Ltd
Kensington and Chelsea, W11 3HX
GSA Electrical Services Ltd
Kensington and Chelsea, W11 2QE
Integrated Electrical Services IRE Ltd
Kensington and Chelsea, SW7 5PR
Interior Design
Kensington and Chelsea, W8 7NB
JYB Electrical
Kensington and Chelsea, SW3 5SA
Landlord Certs London LTD
Kensington and Chelsea, SW7 4EF
London Electricians Ltd
Kensington and Chelsea, SW10 0DN
London Installations Limited
Kensington and Chelsea, SW7 4EF
About emergency electrician in Kensington and Chelsea
An emergency electrician provides urgent call-out services for electrical faults that pose an immediate safety risk or have left your property without power. Common emergencies include complete power loss, burning smells from sockets or the consumer unit, visible sparking, tripping that cannot be reset, exposed live wiring, and electrical faults following water leaks or storms. The electrician's first priority is to make the installation safe — isolating the faulty circuit, identifying the cause, and carrying out immediate repairs where possible. If a permanent repair requires further work, the electrician will make the situation safe and advise on next steps.
Electrical emergencies can be life-threatening. A burning smell from a socket indicates overheating that could start a fire. Sparking suggests an arc fault that can ignite surrounding materials. Complete power loss may indicate a serious fault rather than a simple supply issue. These situations require immediate attention from a qualified electrician who can diagnose the problem, isolate the danger, and make the installation safe. Do not attempt to investigate electrical emergencies yourself — particularly anything involving burning, sparking, or water near electrical installations.
What's included
- Emergency call-out and attendance within agreed timeframe
- Safety assessment and risk evaluation on arrival
- Isolation of faulty circuits to make the installation safe
- Fault diagnosis using test equipment
- Immediate repair of the fault where possible
- Replacement of failed components (MCBs, RCDs, sockets, switches — common parts carried on van)
- Testing of repaired circuits
- Minor Works Certificate for completed repairs
- Written report and recommendations if further work is needed
Typical cost
Emergency Electrician in Kensington and Chelsea typically costs £100–£300 per call-out. Every job is different — describe what you need and a qualified electrician will quote you directly.
Regulations & standards
- BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 (IET Wiring Regulations, 18th Edition): All emergency repair work must comply with the current Wiring Regulations. Even in an emergency, the repair must be safe, properly tested, and documented. A Minor Works Certificate is issued for repairs; an EIC if new circuits are added.
- Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974: Both the electrician and the property occupier have a duty of care. The electrician must not work in conditions that are unsafe (e.g., standing water near live equipment) without appropriate precautions.
- Electricity at Work Regulations 1989: Requires that electrical systems are maintained to prevent danger. Emergency repairs must be carried out to a standard that prevents the fault from recurring and does not create new hazards.
Emergency Electrician FAQs
What counts as an electrical emergency?
An electrical emergency is any situation that poses an immediate risk to life or property: burning smell from electrical fittings, visible sparking, exposed live wiring, total power loss that cannot be restored by resetting the consumer unit, electrical shock from an appliance or fitting, and water ingress into electrical installations. If in doubt, treat it as an emergency — it is better to call and be told it is not urgent than to ignore a potential danger.
Should I turn off the main switch before the electrician arrives?
If you can reach the main switch safely and there is no fire or flooding, yes — turning off the main switch is the safest action. This isolates all circuits and removes the immediate danger. If you cannot reach the switch safely (e.g., the consumer unit is in a flooded area or there is smoke), leave the property and wait for the electrician.
How much does an emergency electrician cost?
A typical emergency call-out is £100-200 for attendance, plus an hourly rate of £50-90 for the repair work. Out-of-hours calls (evenings, weekends, bank holidays) are at the higher end. Most straightforward emergency repairs are completed in 1-2 hours, so expect a total cost of £150-300 for a typical call-out.
My power has gone off but nothing has tripped — what should I do?
If nothing has tripped on your consumer unit and you have no power, the fault is likely with the DNO supply. Check with your neighbours — if they are also affected, call 105 (the national power cut number) to report a supply failure. If only your property is affected, the fault may be in your main fuse (cut-out), which is the DNO's responsibility. Call your DNO rather than an electrician.
Can an emergency electrician do a permanent repair or only a temporary fix?
Most emergency repairs are permanent — replacing a faulty socket, re-terminating a connection, or fitting a new MCB/RCD. If the fault requires more extensive work (e.g., replacing a damaged cable behind a wall), the electrician will make the situation safe and arrange a follow-up visit for the permanent repair.
What should I do if I get an electric shock from an appliance?
If someone receives a shock, do not touch them while they may still be in contact with the electrical source. Turn off the supply at the main switch if you can reach it safely, or use a non-conductive object (wooden chair, dry towel) to separate them from the source. Call 999 if they are injured. Once safe, do not use the appliance or circuit again until an electrician has inspected it. Even a minor shock indicates a fault that needs urgent investigation.
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