How Much Does an Electrician Cost in Snohomish County, WA?
Panel upgrades run $5,610–$16,830 in Snohomish County, WA. See 2026 electrician wages, rewire costs, and financing benchmarks before hiring.
What homeowners in Snohomish County actually pay.
Local market ranges built from regional labor, materials, and permitting data — not national averages.
Panel Upgrade (200 amp)
Whole-Home Rewire (2,000 sq ft)
Outlet / Switch Installation
National typical $2,500 × 3.74x multiplier = $9,350 (range $1,500–$4,500 × 3.74x = $5,610–$16,830)
Why Snohomish County prices look like this.
Electrician Wages and Crew Availability
Local Hazard Exposure and Protective Upgrades
Climate Zone Considerations for Electrical Work
How Electricity Rates Shape Upgrade Decisions
Financing an Electrical Project in Today's Market
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Questions buyers ask about electrical in Snohomish County.
Short answers to the most common things we hear about local pricing, scope, and timing.
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How much does a 200-amp panel upgrade cost in Snohomish County, WA?
Expect **$5,610 to $16,830**, with a typical project landing around **$9,350**. That's the national $1,500–$4,500 range multiplied by the county's 3.74× cost multiplier. Pricing varies with service-drop length, whether the meter base is being relocated, and whether your utility requires a permanent cut and reconnect.
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Why is electrical work so much more expensive here than the national average?
Snohomish County sits in a **very high** cost tier at **3.74× the U.S. baseline**. The two biggest drivers are the Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue metro wage floor — electricians earn a **$48.19/hour mean wage** per 2024 BLS data, or $100,230 annually — and Washington's strict L&I permitting and inspection regime, which adds both hard costs and scheduling overhead to every project.
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What does a whole-home rewire cost for a 2,000 sq ft house?
Budget **$22,440 to $74,800**, with a typical project near **$44,880**. Older homes with knob-and-tube wiring, plaster walls, or finished basements push toward the upper end because accessing wire runs requires substantially more drywall and finish repair work after the electrical is complete.
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How much should I pay to install a single outlet or switch?
Per-device installation runs **$375 to $1,120** locally, with typical pricing around **$655**. Minimum trip charges mean it's usually more economical to batch several devices into one visit rather than calling the electrician back for each new outlet, switch, or dimmer.
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Do I need extra surge protection given Snohomish County's hazard profile?
Yes. The county scores **98.00 (Very High)** for ice storms and **86.10 (Relatively High)** for lightning on the FEMA National Risk Index, and **94.05** for winter weather overall. A whole-home Type 2 surge protective device at the panel is inexpensive insurance for the electronics, heat-pump inverters, and EV chargers common in local homes.
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Do Washington's low electricity rates change which upgrades are worth doing?
Yes. Residential power averaged **$0.138 per kWh** in January 2026, among the lowest rates in the country. That makes electrification projects — heat pumps, induction ranges, EV charging — pay back faster than in high-rate states, so panel-upgrade scope that anticipates future 240V loads is usually worth the incremental labor cost while the electrician is already on site.
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How are Snohomish County homeowners financing electrical projects in 2026?
With 30-year mortgage rates at **6.38%** as of March 26, 2026, most homeowners are avoiding cash-out refinances that would disturb sub-4% first mortgages. HELOCs against the county's **$644,600 median home value**, contractor 0% promotional financing, and PUD/PSE rebate programs are the common paths — especially for panel upgrades priced near the **$9,350** typical project cost.
How these numbers were built.
Cost estimates are derived from government data including the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS), FEMA National Risk Index, EIA energy data, IECC climate zone classifications, Federal Reserve (FRED), and HUD Fair Market Rents.