Hood River and The Dalles have substantial housing inventory built before modern electrical codes — homes where the original wiring is still in service, panels haven't been updated, and safety issues may not be visible without a professional assessment. A licensed electrician's inspection goes deeper than a general home inspector's review: we look at the panel internals, test circuits, assess wiring condition, and identify specific hazards and code deficiencies.
When to Schedule an Electrical Inspection
Before Buying a Home
A general home inspector will flag obvious electrical concerns, but they won't open the panel, test individual circuits, or identify the difference between safe older wiring and wiring that poses a genuine hazard. If you're buying a home in Hood River or The Dalles — particularly an older home — a licensed electrician's inspection before closing gives you an accurate picture of what you're actually taking on. We've walked buyers through homes where the general inspection said "older electrical, recommend evaluation" and found everything from intact systems that needed no work to panels with serious safety problems.
Before a Major Remodel
If you're planning a kitchen remodel, addition, or ADU, knowing the current state of your electrical system before you start saves money and surprises. An inspection before the project begins tells you what the panel can support, whether the existing wiring can stay, and what work will be required by the building department. Better to know this at the planning stage than mid-project.
Periodic Safety Assessment
If your home is more than 25–30 years old and hasn't had any electrical work done, a safety inspection is reasonable maintenance. Electrical systems don't typically announce problems before they become emergencies. Components that degrade over time — breakers, panel connections, wiring insulation — can be identified and addressed before they fail.
After Purchasing an Older Home
If you've recently bought a home in Hood River or The Dalles and didn't have a pre-purchase electrical inspection, scheduling one in the first year gives you a baseline. You'll know what you have, what needs attention, and what can wait.
What an Electrical Inspection Covers
- Panel condition: breaker labeling, double-tapping, signs of overheating, proper grounding and bonding, available capacity
- Wiring type and condition: knob-and-tube, aluminum branch circuits, wiring age and insulation condition
- Outlet and switch function: grounding, GFCI protection in required locations (kitchen, bathroom, garage, exterior, basement)
- Visible wiring in attic, basement, and crawlspace
- Service entrance condition
- Identified code deficiencies and their severity
We provide a written summary of findings with prioritized recommendations — what's a safety hazard requiring prompt attention, what's a code deficiency that affects insurance or resale, and what's a lower-priority improvement.
After the Inspection
If the inspection identifies work that needs to be done, we'll quote that work at the same time. There's no obligation to use us — our job is to give you an accurate assessment first. If you want us to do the remediation work, we'll apply the inspection fee toward the project cost.
For related services, see our electrical wiring and panel upgrade pages. For emergencies, see our 24-hour emergency electrician page.