Electrician Website Design That Gets Calls
Electrician website design starts with proof, because nobody lets an unlicensed stranger into their breaker panel. We build a site that leads with your license, your insurance, and your reviews, generated from your Google Business Profile in minutes for $75 a month.
The most expensive click in the trades
Advertisers pay around $72 for one click on this exact phrase. That is the highest cost in the home-service trades we track, and it says two things. Electrical leads are worth serious money, and everyone competing for them is paying retail. What ranks organically instead is mostly design galleries, template marketplaces, and a Reddit thread where someone shows off a site built for a family friend. Nobody has built the page that just does the job, which is the opening: a site that ranks for your services in your towns takes the $72 clicks for free.
Proof over portfolio
Homeowners screen electricians harder than any other trade, because bad electrical work burns houses down. Most websites for electricians still bury the license number on an About page under a paragraph about being family owned. We put the screening answers where the visitor looks first:
- License number in the header or first screen, next to the insured line, not three clicks deep.
- Permits, addressed in plain words. Say you pull them and handle inspection. Homeowners who ask about permits are the good customers.
- Google reviews the visitor can verify, pulled from your profile. BrightLocal's local consumer review survey has shown year after year how much weight those stars carry in hiring a local pro.
- Tap-to-call on every page, because a homeowner staring at a dead panel is not filling out a long form.
Design flourishes can come later. Proof is the conversion engine.
Pages for the work you want more of
An electrician site should pull the jobs you actually want, not just "electrician near me". Panel upgrades, EV charger installation, whole-house rewires, generator hookups: each gets its own page, and each town you serve gets one too. The homeowner searching "EV charger installer" plus their suburb lands on a page about exactly that, with your license and your number on it. One generic services list catches none of those searches.
Paste your profile, get your site
There is no design brief and no discovery call. Paste your Google Business Profile link and the site generates from what Google already knows: your services, service area, hours, photos, and reviews, laid out as fast plain code built for an electrical contractor. No template underneath, no page builder slowing it down.
Changes work like a text message. Say "add a generator install page" or "move the license number up", review the draft, approve it, done. Every edit is a draft first, and rollback is instant.
Electricians sell trust for a living, then put up a website with a stock photo of a lightbulb and no license number. Lead with the license. It is the one thing on the page your competitor cannot copy.
Where this fits, and what it costs
This is the electrical version of our contractor website design service; the same system lays out differently for other trades, like HVAC website design with its seasonal pages. The price is $75 a month and you can see what is included: design, build, hosting, a branded domain, lead capture, edits, and analytics. If you would rather build it yourself on a weekend, the electrician website builder page covers that route without the sales pitch.
FAQ
Does an electrician need a website?
Yes, for the same reason any contractor does: your Google profile catches map searches, but the service searches ("panel upgrade cost", "EV charger installer") go to real pages. The longer answer is at does a contractor need a website?
Should my license number be on my website?
Yes, and prominently. It is public information, it answers the visitor's first screening question, and hiding it makes homeowners assume the worst. We place it in the first screen on every site we build for electricians.
How much does it cost to have an electrician website built?
$75 a month here, with hosting and edits included. For the wider market rates across freelancers, agencies, and subscriptions, see how much it costs to pay someone to build a website.
Can I add services like EV chargers later?
Yes. Ask for the page in plain English, review the generated draft, approve it, and it is live. Dropping a service works the same way, and rollback is instant if you change your mind.