Electrician day rates in East of England
East of England · 2026
£295–£440
per day, ex VAT
£37–£55
per hour
+5%
vs UK average
A electrician working in East of England typically charges £295–£440 a day (£37–£55 an hour), ex VAT — 5% above the UK average of £350 a day. Slightly above the national average, with the Cambridge corridor and Essex commuter towns pulling rates up while rural East Anglia sits closer to the middle of the range.
Demand for EICRs and consumer-unit upgrades has stayed strong as rental compliance rules tightened, which keeps experienced electricians' diaries full and rates firm. Fault-finding and call-outs are usually charged at a premium hourly rate rather than the day rate.
What moves a electrician's rate
- 01Registration with a competent-person scheme (NICEIC, NAPIT) and whether the work is notifiable under Part P
- 02Testing and certification time — an EICR day is priced differently to a socket-and-switch day
- 03Domestic repair work versus commercial or new-build contracts
- 04Test equipment, calibration and insurance overheads carried into the rate
East of England vs everywhere else
| London | £380–£565 |
| South East | £320–£485 |
| East of England | £295–£440 |
| South West | £280–£420 |
| Scotland | £270–£405 |
| West Midlands | £270–£405 |
| North West | £265–£395 |
| East Midlands | £260–£385 |
| Yorkshire | £250–£380 |
| Wales | £250–£375 |
| North East | £240–£355 |
| Northern Ireland | £230–£345 |
Charging £370? Prove it's enough.
The market range is the market's number. Yours depends on your overheads, your tax pot and how many days you actually bill. Run it through the calculator, then send the quote while the number's fresh.
Other trades in East of England
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Indicative ranges compiled from public cost guides, reviewed July 2026. Ex VAT. A guide, not a quote, and not financial advice.