Electricians in California: Licensing, Costs & Starting a Business (2026)
California is the largest and most complex electrical contracting market in the U.S. The Contractors State License Board (CSLB) Class C-10 license is required for electrical contracting, Title 24 energy codes mandate solar and EV-readiness in new construction, and California's aggressive clean energy mandates are creating a decade-long solar, battery storage, and EV charging installation boom. Billing rates are 30–50% above the national average, and electricians with solar and battery storage certifications are in exceptionally high demand.
CSLB Class C-10 Electrical Contractor Licensing
The California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) issues the Class C-10 (Electrical) contractor license. Requirements: application fee $330, fingerprint processing $49–$77, PSI trade exam ($60) + PSI law and business exam ($60). Qualifying Individual must have 4 years of journeyman-level electrical experience. Bond: $25,000 contractor bond. License renewal: biennial, $450. Individual electrician certification in California flows through IBEW-NECA Joint Apprenticeship Training Committees (JATC) or DIR-approved non-union programs. Journeyman Inside Wireman: 5-year apprenticeship, 8,000 hours + 900 classroom hours.
Startup Costs in California
California startup costs are 30–50% above national average. Service van: $40,000–$72,000 new. Core hand and power tools: $8,000–$18,000. Electrical test equipment: $3,000–$8,000. Solar PV tools: $3,000–$6,000. EV charging installation equipment: $1,500–$3,500. Initial materials inventory: $5,000–$12,000. Total startup for solo operator: $75,000–$140,000. Three-van commercial electrical team: $220,000–$450,000.
Title 24, Solar Mandates, and EV Charging Requirements
California's Title 24 Part 6 (2022 standards effective January 1, 2023) created mandatory electrical work on all new construction. Solar PV mandated on all new single-family homes (since 2020) and low-rise multifamily (since 2023). Battery storage systems increasingly required for new homes. EV-ready conduit and 240V outlets required in all new homes and multifamily buildings. Heat pump mandates increase electrical service load — many homes need panel upgrades to 200A or 400A. Title 24 compliance creates systematic electrical add-on work on nearly every residential new construction permit in California.
Market Rates and Revenue in California
California electrician billing rates are among the highest in the nation. Labor rate: $125–$230/hr (Bay Area and LA top of range). Panel upgrade (100A to 200A): $2,500–$5,500. Full home rewire (1,500 sq ft): $12,000–$25,000. New construction electrical per unit: $12,000–$22,000. EV Level 2 charger install: $800–$2,500. DCFC commercial EV charging: $20,000–$100,000+ for electrical work. Revenue per service van: $240,000–$420,000/yr in California.
Prevailing Wage and Public Works
California public works projects require prevailing wage for all electrical work over $25,000. DIR publishes prevailing wage determinations by craft and county — electrician prevailing wages range from $80–$120+/hr total package. DIR registration: $400/yr for contractors bidding on public works. AB5: electricians cannot be classified as 1099 in most circumstances — misclassification exposes contractors to PAGA penalties. IBEW contractors are automatically prevailing wage compliant; open-shop contractors must pay the same rates.
Insurance, Labor, and Business Costs
General liability: $3,500–$8,000/yr for solo operator. Workers' comp: $7–$14 per $100 payroll. Commercial auto (per van): $3,200–$7,000/yr. Journeyman electrician salary (open shop): $75,000–$100,000/yr. Master electrician: $95,000–$130,000/yr. California requires daily OT after 8 hours, meal break compliance, and CalOSHA compliance. Total first-year operating costs for 2-van operation: $380,000–$600,000.
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