House Rewiring North Finchley
Lights keep tripping in your North Finchley home? Old wiring failing your EICR certificate? Planning a kitchen extension but your fuse box can’t cope? We’ll rewire your property safely — full rewires, partial upgrades, or room-by-room — all tested, certified, and completed with minimal disruption.
Why Choose Rudi Electrics
for House Rewiring North Finchley?
Your concerns answered — here’s why North London homeowners trust us for full and partial rewires.
“How much mess will this create in my home?”
Minimal disruption guaranteed. We use dust sheets, protect your floors and furniture, work room-by-room to keep areas liveable, and clean up thoroughly at the end of each day. You can continue living in your home while we work.
“Will I get a fixed price or will costs spiral?”
Fixed price guarantee after survey. We visit your property, assess the full scope of work, and provide a detailed written quote before we start. No hidden extras, no price increases — the price we quote is what you pay.
“How long will my power be off during the work?”
Power stays on in most of your home. We work circuit-by-circuit so you can still use lights, appliances, and heating in other rooms. Full power isolation is only needed for a few hours when connecting the new new consumer unit.
“Will the work be properly certified and legal?”
Fully certified to BS7671 18th Edition. You’ll receive an Electrical Installation Certificate with full test results, detailed circuit schedule, and Building Regulations notification. Essential for insurance, mortgages, and selling your property.
House Rewiring in North Finchley N12
We’re based in Edmonton N18 — and we cover North Finchley N12 regularly — and house rewiring is one of our most common jobs across the area, given the age of the housing stock. Post-war council estates, 1930s terraces around High Road N12 and High Road N12, and Victorian properties near the North Circular are typical of the area — many still have rubber-insulated or aluminium wiring that's well past its safe lifespan.
Full rewires in North Finchley typically take 3–5 days depending on property size. We work circuit-by-circuit to keep disruption minimal and always include a new consumer unit and EICR certificate on completion. We can also add an EV charger circuit at the same time. North Finchley is part of our wider house rewiring service in North London. For general electrical work in the area, see our electrician North Finchley page.
What Our Customers Say About Us
Real reviews from homeowners across North London. Live Google reviews below — for all 358+ reviews across review platforms, see our testimonials page →
Book Your Free House Rewire Survey
Tell us about your property and we'll arrange a free no-obligation survey — fixed price quote before any work begins.
NICEIC Registered
All rewires carried out by an NICEIC Registered electrician — fully compliant with BS 7671 18th Edition and accepted by mortgage lenders, insurers and building control.
Fixed Price Quote
Free site survey, then a fixed price quote — no hourly billing, no surprise extras. You see the full scope before any work begins.
Minimal Disruption
We work room by room to keep disruption to a minimum — most 3-bed rewires complete in 3–5 days with the property occupied.
From £2,500
Partial rewires from £2,500. Full house rewires priced after survey. Always honest, always fixed.
🔒 Your details are kept private and never shared. We'll call within 24 hours.
Signs Your North Finchley Home Needs Rewiring
Many homes in North Finchley (N12) were built between the 1930s and 1970s. Many still have outdated wiring that poses a real safety risk. Here's what to look out for.
Tripping Fuses or Circuit Breakers
If your fuse box trips regularly — especially when using multiple appliances — your wiring can't handle modern demand. One of the most common signs we see in N12 properties.
Burning Smells or Scorch Marks
Any burning smell from sockets, switches or your fuse board is a serious warning sign. Scorch marks around sockets indicate arcing — a major fire hazard needing immediate attention.
Flickering or Dimming Lights
Lights that flicker or dim when you switch on appliances suggest loose connections or wiring struggling under load — signs of deteriorating electrical installation.
Old Round Pin Sockets or Rubber Wiring
Round pin sockets, brown or black rubber-coated cables, or cloth-wrapped wiring are signs of pre-1960s installation. These must be replaced — dangerous, not just outdated.
Not Enough Sockets
Relying on extension leads throughout the house means your wiring wasn't designed for modern life. Especially common in Victorian and Edwardian properties across N12.
Failed EICR or No Certificate
A recent EICR in North Finchley with a C1 or C2 code, or no certificate at all, means a rewire is often the most cost-effective solution over multiple repairs.
How We Complete Your
House Rewire
Professional rewiring from start to finish. Most 2-3 bedroom houses take 5-7 days, while partial rewires can be completed in 1-3 days depending on scope.
Free Site Survey
We visit your property to assess the current wiring, discuss your requirements, check access to cables, and confirm the scope of work. This survey is completely free with no obligation.
Fixed Price Quote
You'll receive a detailed fixed-price quote covering all materials, labour, testing, and certification. No hidden costs—the price we quote is the price you pay.
Schedule & Prepare
Once you accept the quote, we schedule the work at a time that suits you. We'll advise on any preparation needed and confirm our arrival time. Materials are ordered and delivered to site.
First Fix Wiring
We run all new cables through walls, floors, and ceilings. Floorboards are carefully lifted, cables are routed neatly, and protection is installed. We use dust sheets and clean up daily to minimize disruption.
Second Fix & Accessories
All sockets, switches, light fittings, and accessories are installed. We fit the new new consumer unit with RCBO protection, connect all circuits, and ensure everything is properly labelled.
Testing & Certification
Full electrical testing including insulation resistance, earth fault loop impedance, and RCD trip times. You receive an Electrical Installation Certificate, full test results, and Building Control notification.
House Rewiring Pricing
Quick reference for North Finchley homeowners. Fixed quotes given after a free site survey.
- ✓ Targeted scope — kitchen, room, or extension
- ✓ New sockets, switches & cabling
- ✓ Full testing & NICEIC certification
- ✓ 12-month workmanship guarantee
- ★ Complete house rewire — all circuits
- ★ New RCBO consumer unit upgrade
- ★ Full testing & NICEIC certification
- ★ 12-month workmanship guarantee
- ✓ Full rewire + premium consumer unit
- ✓ Multiple circuit design
- ✓ Full testing & NICEIC certification
- ✓ 12-month workmanship guarantee
Professional House Rewiring North Finchley — Across All Property Types
From the dense Victorian terraces of Upper North Finchley to the post-war semis of Lower North Finchley — we've rewired properties across North Finchley N12. Here's how we approach each property type.
Victorian & Edwardian Terraces
📍 High Road N12, Ballards Lane, Friary Park, Woodside Park Road
North Finchley's older streets have Edwardian and early-Georgian-revival terraces — built 1900s–1920s along the side roads off Ballards Lane and around Woodside Park. Many still carry installations from the 1960s upgrade era: cloth-covered cables in original first-floor lighting circuits, MK fuse boxes with rewireable fuses, and undersized earth conductors that don't meet modern fault-current requirements.
Full rewire with twin-and-earth, modern Wylex RCBO consumer unit, separate kitchen and bathroom circuits, full earthing upgrade to 16mm² main earth conductor where required, and main bonding to gas and water. We work around lath-and-plaster ceilings where they exist — typically lifting floorboards in the bedroom above to drop cables down studwork, minimising visible chase damage.
1930s–1950s Council & Private Semis
📍 Lodge Lane, Russell Lane, Holden Road, Sussex Ring
1930s semis are the dominant N12 housing type — Holden Road, Russell Lane, the streets around Friary Park, and the Woodside Park residential roads. Many were rewired in the 1970s with PVC T&E but the consumer units of that era (Wylex Standard, MK Sentry) didn't have RCDs and the circuits are now nearing end of useful life. Some properties also have 1960s additions for second-floor loft rooms that were never properly incorporated.
Assessment rewire — IR test on every circuit to determine what's still serviceable from the 70s rewire. Failing circuits replaced with new T&E, healthy circuits brought onto a modern Wylex RCBO board, SPD added, all earthing verified. Loft conversion circuits properly incorporated with correct RCBO protection rather than left as informal extensions.
Post-War Flats & Regeneration Developments
📍 Woodside Park, Friary Park, Tally Ho Corner, Whetstone
North Finchley has seen significant regeneration around High Road N12, with new flat developments alongside older Victorian and 1930s housing stock. Older properties typically have outdated wiring with no RCDs and limited consumer unit capacity. New-build apartments may have developer-installed wiring with insufficient sockets and no provision for EV charging. Some leaseholders need freeholder approval before electrical works.
For 1960s ex-council blocks around Tally Ho Corner we work flat-by-flat with managing agent coordination — modern RCBO boards, separate kitchen rings, EV-charger-ready spare ways. Subdivided Victorian semis near Woodside Park station get separate consumer units per flat with dedicated meters.
Extended Terraces & HMO Properties
📍 Throughout North Finchley N12 — rear extensions, HMO conversions, multi-occupancy. See all our Barnet rewires →
North Finchley sees lower HMO density than inner-NL but significant rental conversion — flats above shops on High Road N12, large Victorian semis subdivided to 2-3 flats, and HMO conversions near Woodside Park station. Common issues: shared neutrals between flats (always C2 on EICR), main earthing not upgraded when properties were subdivided, no fire-alarm interlink between flats per BS 5839-6 Grade D requirements.
Flat-by-flat rewire with proper circuit separation — each flat gets its own consumer unit with separate live and neutral, dedicated kitchen ring, RCBO protection throughout. Interlinked smoke and heat alarms wired Grade D LD2 across all flats with battery backup. Building Control notification under Part P and full EIC for landlord licensing or sale.
Need a rewire for your North Finchley property?
House Rewiring North Finchley FAQs
Clear answers to the most common questions North Finchley homeowners ask about house rewiring, partial rewires, EICR-driven rewires, and what's involved.
For official guidance, visit Electrical Safety First or read the Building Regulations guidance.
What does it cost to rewire a 2, 3, or 4-bedroom house in North Finchley? ▼
Honest pricing depends on house size, age, and how much wiring already exists. As a guide for North Finchley properties:
- Partial rewire (kitchen, 1-2 rooms, or consumer unit only): from £2,500
- Full 2-3 bedroom house (typical N12 terrace or N12 semi): £4,500–£6,500
- 4+ bedroom or larger Victorian (the bigger Victorian properties): £7,500–£10,000+
That includes materials, full first-fix and second-fix, new RCBO consumer unit, testing, certification, and Part P sign-off. Plaster patching with bonding plaster is included. Skim coats, painting, and re-decoration aren't — those are a decorator's job. Older North Finchley stock with solid floors or lath-and-plaster walls adds 1-2 days of cable-routing time, which we factor into the quote upfront — not at the end. You get a fixed written quote after a free survey. No day-rate creep.
How long does a rewire take, and can I live in the house with kids or pets while it's happening? ▼
For most North Finchley homes the work runs 5-10 working days end-to-end. A typical 3-bed semi takes 6-7 days; a Victorian terrace with solid floors closer to 8-10. We work room by room so you can stay living there, and we maintain power to circuits we're not actively working on — fridge/freezer stays running, Wi-Fi stays up most of the time, and we do full power isolation only for short windows when connecting the new consumer unit (you get 24 hours' notice, never a surprise).
It's still disruptive: noise during wall chasing, dust during first-fix, and rooms come out of action one at a time. If you've got a baby, working from home, or pets nervous of strangers, some North Finchley clients go to family for the noisiest 2-3 days — but most ride it out fine.
How do I actually know if my house needs a full rewire, or is it just the fuse box? ▼
Honest answer: most "rewire" calls we get in North Finchley turn out to be either consumer-unit-only jobs or partial rewires — not full rewires. The signs that genuinely point to a full rewire:
- Black rubber-insulated cable in the loft or under floorboards (1950s and earlier)
- Cloth-covered cables behind switches (pre-WWII installations, common in High Road N12 and High Road N12 terraces)
- No earthing to lighting circuits, or only two pins in some sockets
- Multiple circuits failing on EICR (small failures don't justify a full rewire)
If your fuse box just looks old (a wirewound or rewireable type), that alone is just a consumer unit job — usually £800-£1,200, not £6,000+. Frequent tripping on its own usually points to one bad circuit or appliance, not the whole house. We'll tell you which it is during the free survey, and we don't push rewires that aren't needed.
My EICR failed with C1 or C2 codes — does that mean I need a full rewire? ▼
Usually not. A failed EICR (a single C1 or one or more C2 codes) means specific items need fixing, but a full rewire is overkill in most cases we see. The most common North Finchley EICR failures:
- No RCD protection on circuits → fixed by replacing the consumer unit (£800-£1,200)
- Damaged insulation on lighting drops → fixed by replacing the affected circuits, not the whole house
- Missing bonding to incoming gas/water → 1-day remedial job
- Borrowed neutrals or shared circuits → targeted rewire of those circuits only
If your EICR has "rewire recommended" across most circuits with codes flagging cloth insulation throughout — then yes, the whole house probably does need it. Send us the report and we'll give you a straight read: targeted remedial work, partial rewire, or full rewire — and the actual price for each.
Can I do a partial rewire — just the kitchen, ground floor, or consumer unit? ▼
Yes, and it's often the right call for North Finchley homeowners renovating in stages. Common partial scopes we do:
- Kitchen ring + lighting (tied to a kitchen renovation): £1,500-£2,500
- Ground floor or upstairs only: roughly half the price of a full rewire, sensible if one half clearly has older wiring
- Consumer unit + earthing only: £800-£1,500, fixes the most common safety failures
- EV charger install (standalone, includes dedicated circuit and isolator): from £1,499 (standard 7kW), £1,799 (premium 7kW with advanced features)
The catch: if your incoming supply or main earth needs upgrading, that's a one-off cost regardless of how much you rewire. We'll tell you whether partial works for your specific property — sometimes the saving is real, sometimes a full rewire is actually better value if you'd otherwise be back in two years.
Should I rewire before or after a kitchen extension, loft conversion, or back-of-house renovation? ▼
Almost always before the finishes go in, at the same time as the structural work. This is where most homeowners waste money — rewiring the existing house, then ripping walls open six months later for the extension.
Practical order on a typical North Finchley renovation:
- Rewire + new consumer unit alongside the build's first-fix
- New kitchen/loft/extension circuits installed at the same time, fed from one new board
- Second-fix electrics with the kitchen install or after plastering
- Single Part P certificate covers everything
For loft conversions specifically: the new loft circuit and any added consumer unit capacity can be done as part of the loft build. Same for a side-return extension — we run new cabling for the kitchen and bi-folds without disturbing the rest of the house. Ask us to coordinate with your builder; we've worked alongside most of the North Finchley ones.
How disruptive is it really — walls, floors, plaster, wallpaper, dust? ▼
Honest version: it's noisy and dusty for 2-3 days during first-fix, much calmer after that. Specifically:
- Walls: we chase shallow channels for cable drops — about 1-inch deep. We patch them with bonding plaster, leaving them ready for a decorator to skim and finish. Wallpapered walls need a strip peeled back, which has to be re-papered after.
- Floors: suspended timber floors (most North Finchley terraces) need carpet/laminate lifted and floorboards lifted in strategic spots — refitted carefully, but they may show. Solid concrete floors (a lot of North Finchley ex-council semis): we route through ceilings instead.
- Lath-and-plaster ceilings (Victorian houses around High Road N12): we minimise drilling; sometimes patch repairs are needed.
- Dust: unavoidable during chasing. We use dust extractors at source, sheet up before starting, and clean down each evening — but expect a deep clean afterwards.
Plaster patching with bonding plaster is included. Skim coats, finishing, painting, and any re-decoration are a decorator's job, not ours.
Can you rewire a Victorian or Edwardian property without ruining the original features? ▼
Yes — and it's most of what we do in North Finchley. The Victorian terraces along High Road N12 and surrounding streets have specific quirks:
- Lath-and-plaster ceilings — we work around them where possible, dropping cables into wall cavities and routing via the floor void above, so the original ceiling stays intact.
- Original cornicing and ceiling roses — we don't drill through them. Switch drops route alongside, not through.
- Brass, Bakelite, or period switches — if you want to keep them, modern smart-control kits can sit behind them invisibly. We'll tell you which can stay and which can't (anything pre-1955 with no earth has to come out).
- Original floorboards — we lift carefully and re-fit. Tongue-and-groove pine in good condition we keep; rotten or split boards we replace.
Tell us what features matter to you before we start. We've never had a customer regret the conversation, and we've often saved features a previous quote planned to remove.
I'm buying a house in North Finchley — the survey flagged "old wiring". What should I do? ▼
Three steps, in order:
- Get an EICR before exchange if you can. A homebuyer's survey only flags wiring as "outside scope" — they don't lift floorboards. An EICR is £180-£280, takes 2-3 hours, and gives you a real answer. We can usually book within a few days.
- Use the EICR to negotiate. If the report shows C1 or multiple C2 codes, that's documented evidence to drop your offer by the cost of remedial work — typically £1,500-£8,000. Sellers often accept rather than risk losing the sale.
- Don't panic about "old wiring" alone. A 1980s installation with a working consumer unit and RCDs may be perfectly serviceable for another 10 years. Truly dangerous installations (pre-1960s with no earth, burned or damaged cables) get flagged as C1 — that's the line, not just age.
Mortgage point: most lenders don't refuse mortgages over old wiring as long as the EICR is satisfactory or the seller agrees to remedial work before completion.
Will the new wiring support EV charging, a heat pump, smart home, and home office circuits? ▼
Yes — and it should. The point of rewiring now is not to be back in five years. What we include as standard on North Finchley rewires:
- EV charger readiness — spare 32A way on the consumer unit, labelled isolator at the meter end, ready for a 7kW or 22kW charger install
- Heat pump readiness — separate dedicated supply with the right cable spec from the start (saves money versus retrofitting later)
- Smart home wiring — neutrals to all switch positions (period houses often don't have these, which blocks smart switch installs later)
- Home office circuits — separate ring or radial, ideally with surge protection
- USB-C sockets in kitchen, lounge, or bedside areas if you want them
Specifying these up front during the rewire is a small incremental cost while we're already routing cables. Retrofitting them later — once walls are closed and finished — costs many times more because we'd need to chase walls, lift floors, and re-decorate. Tell us your future plans during the survey and we'll build the cabling around them.
Will I have power overnight and during the work? ▼
Yes for most of it. Specifically:
- Power stays on overnight, every night — we leave you with a working consumer unit and at least one ring, lighting circuit, and fridge feed live every evening before we go.
- Phased outages during the day — when we're working on a circuit, that circuit is off. The rest stay live. You can usually still use kettle, microwave, fridge, and Wi-Fi from rooms we're not in.
- One full isolation window — when we swap the existing consumer unit for the new one (typically day 5-7). This takes 2-4 hours. We schedule it mid-morning, give 24 hours' notice, and warn you to defrost anything important.
If you're working from home, plan your critical calls or deadlines around the isolation day — we can flex which day if something is non-negotiable.
Should I rewire my house before selling? Does it actually add value? ▼
Honest answer: only if the wiring is genuinely failing or unsafe — not as a value-add alone.
What works:
- Failing EICR + a buyer survey ahead — yes, rewire (or do remedial work) before listing. Buyers walk away from C1/C2 code lists, or they negotiate harder than the cost of fixing it.
- Pre-1970s wiring with no modern consumer unit — at minimum upgrade the consumer unit (£800-£1,200) so the EICR comes back satisfactory. That alone removes the survey objection.
- Working installation that's just "old" — usually no. The buyer benefits more from doing it themselves (sockets where they want, smart-home ready) than paying you to do it generically.
If you do rewire pre-sale: time it 1-3 months before listing so the certificate looks fresh. Photograph the new consumer unit, keep the certificate, list "fully rewired with Part P certificate" in the marketing.
Nearby North London areas we cover for house rewiring
Need a House Rewire
in North Finchley?
Honest, fixed-price quotes after a free survey. NICEIC-Registered, fully certified, and finished tidy — ready for decoration. Covering North Finchley N12/N12 and surrounding areas.





























