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Domestic Electrician

Install, test, and maintain the electrical systems in homes and small commercial buildings — from wiring a new build to fitting EV chargers and solar panels.

Canonical page: /careers/domestic-electrician
Physical demand

High

People contact

Moderate

Time to entry

3–4 years via electrical apprenticeship; college routes typically 2 years + AM2

What you do

Domestic electricians design, install, and maintain low-voltage electrical systems in homes and small commercial premises. Day-to-day work includes first-fix wiring on new builds, consumer unit (fuse box) upgrades, fault-finding on existing installations, fitting sockets and lighting, and increasingly: EV charge point installation and battery storage systems for solar PV. All domestic electrical work must be certified under Part P of the Building Regulations.

Why this career is resilient

Electrical skills are rooted in physical installation in real buildings — work that cannot be done remotely or automated. The UK's drive to electrify heating and transport (heat pumps, EV chargers) is creating a significant skills shortage. Grid capacity upgrades and solar adoption are creating further demand. NICEIC/NAPIT registration and Part P competency act as regulatory barriers to entry that protect skilled tradespeople from commoditisation.


Routes in

Apprenticeship

Earn while you learn: work with an employer and study part-time, leading to a nationally recognised qualification. Typically funded by the government and your employer.

Duration: 1–4 years depending on trade

Full-time college course

Study full-time at a further education college, usually for 1–2 years. You will need to fund yourself or apply for a student loan (available for Level 4+ courses).

Duration: 1–2 years

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