Fuse Box / Consumer Unit Replacement Wembley Park
Still got an old fuse box in your Wembley Park home? Tripping circuits, failed EICR testing, or no RCD protection? We’ll replace it with a modern consumer unit — installed, tested and certified in a single visit.
Why Choose Rudi Electrics
for Fuse Box / Consumer Unit Replacement in Wembley Park?
Your concerns answered — here’s why Wembley Park homeowners and landlords trust us for fuse box replacement and consumer unit upgrades.
“Will I get a fixed price or surprise extras?”
Fixed price quote after a free survey. We check incoming supply, earthing, circuits and HMO requirements before quoting — the figure you see is the figure you pay. Standard 5–7 way RCBO board from £800; 8–12 way premium boards from £950; 16+ way large-property boards from £1,200.
“How long will my power be off?”
Most installs are completed in 3–4 hours with a single short power-off window. We pre-run new tails, isolate at the main switch, swap the board, and re-energise circuit-by-circuit while testing. Fridge / freezer planning is part of the survey conversation, not a surprise on the day.
“Are you fitting a quality unit, not a cheap import?”
Only FuseBox, Wylex, Hager or Schneider consumer units — never unbranded imports. Type A or AC RCBOs as required, Type 2 SPD as standard, and AFDDs on bedroom circuits where landlord HMO compliance requires it. All BS EN 61439-3 listed.
“Will it pass building control and EICR?”
Every install is notified to Building Control through our NICEIC registration (D609991) and you receive a full BS 7671 18th Edition Amendment 2 Electrical Installation Certificate within 24 hours. Insurer-accepted, mortgage-accepted, and remedial-friendly for any future EICR.
A Quintain Flat Off Olympic Way — Smart-Home Loads Crashing the Dual-RCD
Owner kept losing power to half the flat every time the smart-home hub did its overnight sync. Clearly not a wiring fault — but the dual-RCD didn't agree.
On testing, the cumulative earth leakage from the smart TV, the smart hub, the induction hob and the router on one RCD bank crossed 30 mA. Nothing was actually faulty: the board topology was wrong for the load.
I fitted a 14-way full-RCBO unit with one device per circuit, ran the leakage test under live load, and confirmed every circuit reads under 5 mA after the swap.
EIC and freeholder consent pack submitted to Quintain's managing agent.
What Our Customers Say About Us
Real reviews from homeowners and landlords across Wembley Park and the wider London Borough of Brent. Live Google reviews below — for all reviews across platforms, see our testimonials page →
Our Fuse Box / Consumer Unit Installations
Real jobs completed across North London — FuseBox & Wylex RCBO boards, fully certified.
Book Your Free Fuse Box / Consumer Unit Survey
Tell us about your Wembley Park property and we’ll arrange a free no-obligation survey — fixed price quote within 24 hours.
NICEIC Registered
All installs by an NICEIC Registered electrician (D609991) — fully BS 7671 18th Ed Amendment 2 compliant and accepted by mortgage lenders, insurers and Building Control.
Fixed Price Quote
Free site survey, fixed-price quote within 24 hours — no hourly billing, no surprise extras. From £800 standard, £950 premium, £1,200 large boards.
Same-Day Install
Most fuse box replacements completed in 3–4 hours on the day. Power back on the same evening with a single short isolation window.
From £800
Standard 5–7 way RCBO board from £800. Premium 8–12 way from £950. 16+ way large-property boards from £1,200. HMO compliance pack quoted bespoke.
🔒 Your details are kept private and never shared. We'll call within 24 hours.
Signs Your Wembley Park Property Needs a New Fuse Box / Consumer Unit
Six tells we look for in Wembley Park fuse-box surveys. If two or more apply, a board replacement is usually the right call — not a repair.
Tripping that won’t reset
If your RCD trips and resets briefly then drops again the same evening, that’s a fault on a circuit — not a fuse box that just “needs a swap”. We isolate it during the install so the new board doesn’t inherit the same fault.
Burning smell or scorch marks
Brown discolouration around the main switch or burning plastic smell from the meter cupboard means heat damage at the consumer unit. Stop using high-load appliances and call us — this is a same-day priority job.
Wirewound or rewireable fuses
Old porcelain fuse holders with rewireable wire, or cartridge fuses with no MCBs at all, mean the board is from before 1980 and has zero RCD protection. EICR will fail it on C2; insurers may refuse claims.
Failed EICR or insurer refusal
C1 or C2 codes for “no RCD on socket circuits”, “outdated consumer unit”, or “non-compliant with current standards” are all board-level fixes. Send us the EICR and we’ll quote remedial work without a survey.
HMO licensing inspection
Council HMO licensing now requires AFDDs on bedroom circuits (BS 7671 Amendment 2). If your existing board has no AFDDs and you’re renewing a licence, the inspection will flag it. Per-flat boards with AFDD are the standard fix.
Frequent appliance damage
If your TV, fridge, or boiler PCB has died more than once in the last few years, that’s typically a Type 2 SPD problem — older boards have no surge protection. New install adds SPD as standard.
How We Replace Your
Fuse Box / Consumer Unit
Professional install from start to finish. Most fuse box replacements complete in 3-4 hours with minimal disruption to your home.
Initial Assessment
We check your incoming supply, earthing arrangement (TT vs TN-C-S), circuit count, RCD/SPD status, EICR history if any, and confirm whether AFDDs are required (HMO sleeping rooms). The survey is free with no obligation and you get a written fixed-price quote within 24 hours.
Isolation & Removal
DNO main fuse pulled with permission, existing tails isolated, old board removed cleanly. We cap and label every circuit before disconnecting so reconnection is methodical, not guesswork. No live working at any stage.
New Unit Installation
Modern consumer unit (FuseBox, Wylex, Hager or Schneider) fitted with new 25mm meter tails, 100A main switch, full RCBO protection per circuit, Type 2 SPD on the main bus, and AFDDs where required. Cables labelled and torque-checked.
Testing & Verification
Full BS 7671 testing: insulation resistance (every circuit), Zs / Ze loop impedance, RCD trip times, SPD verification, polarity checks, and earth fault path. Any pre-existing fault is logged and discussed before we re-energise.
Fault Finding (If Needed)
If a circuit fails testing on the new board (typically a hidden borrowed neutral or insulation breakdown on an existing run), we find and fix it the same day where possible. Most fixes add £80–£180; major issues are quoted before any extra work starts.
Certification & Handover
Electrical Installation Certificate issued, photographed install record, written labels inside the board, Building Control notification through our NICEIC registration, and a verbal walkthrough of the new RCBOs and SPD test buttons. 12-month workmanship guarantee starts on handover.
Fuse Box / Consumer Unit Replacement Pricing
Quick reference for Wembley Park homeowners. Fixed quotes given after a free site survey.
- ✓ New RCBO / Dual RCD consumer unit
- ✓ 100A main switch & 25mm meter tails
- ✓ Type 2 SPD surge protection
- ✓ Full BS 7671 testing & certification
- ✓ 12-month workmanship guarantee
- ★ 8–12 way full RCBO board
- ★ Individual circuit protection
- ★ Type 2 SPD & 100A main switch
- ★ FuseBox / Wylex / Hager premium unit
- ★ Priority install scheduling
- ✓ 16+ way full RCBO board
- ✓ Individual circuit protection
- ✓ Type 2 SPD & 100A main switch
- ✓ Full circuit schedule documentation
- ✓ 12-month workmanship guarantee
Fuse Box / Consumer Unit Replacement Wembley Park — Across All Property Types
From period properties to modern flats and HMO conversions — we replace fuse boxes across every Wembley Park property type. Each comes with its own quirks, and we know what to look for.
Victorian & Edwardian Terraces
📍 Empire Way, Olympic Way, Bridge Road, Forty Lane
Wembley Park has very limited Victorian/Edwardian stock — most older housing is 1920s–30s semis. The area is dominated by the post-2010 Wembley Park regeneration delivering thousands of new build-to-rent flats. Developer-installed boards in new flats sometimes lack capacity for modern appliances; older 1930s stock typically has 1990s-era split-load boards still in service.
For new-build flats: targeted RCBO board upgrade where developer-spec board can't handle modern induction-hob or EV-charger loads. For older 1930s/Edwardian stock: full Wylex Nexus CU replacement with Type 2 SPD and full bonding upgrade.
1930s–1960s Semis & Council Properties
📍 Wembley Hill Road, Park Lane, Talgarth Crescent, Engineers Way
The dominant pre-regen housing is 1930s semi-detached along Empire Way side streets and the residential roads toward Preston Road. Most have 1970s rewires with Wylex Standard fuse boards (no RCDs), aluminium earthing now corroded, and undersized lighting circuits.
Modern Wylex RCBO consumer unit, Type 2 SPD, aluminium earthing replaced with 16mm² copper, full bonding upgrade. Solid floors typical of 1930s construction get tail routing via cupboard-under-stairs or surface conduit on internal walls.
Post-War Flats & New Developments
📍 Wembley Central, Preston Road, Tokyngton, Brent Cross
Older Wembley Park blocks from the 1960s–80s often have undersized consumer units with limited ways — not enough capacity for modern electrical demands including EV charging, home offices, and induction hobs. Wembley Park regeneration new-build flats may have developer-specified units that need upgrading to accommodate additional circuits or smart home systems.
For Wembley Park regen flats we typically upgrade developer-spec 6-way boards to 12-way Wylex Nexus to accommodate EV chargers and induction hobs. Older flats around Forty Lane get full RCBO consumer unit replacement with separate live/neutral per flat.
HMO & Multi-Occupancy Properties
📍 Throughout Wembley Park HA9 — HMOs, bedsits, shared houses. See all our Brent fuse box / consumer unit work →
Wembley Park has rapidly growing HMO and build-to-rent activity — Brent's licensing scheme applies and AFDD is mandatory on HMO socket circuits since March 2022 per BS 7671:2018+A2:2022. Many developer-installed boards in new flats lack AFDD where socket circuits supply individual letting rooms.
Wylex NM range CU with AFDD-RCBO on every socket circuit, dedicated kitchen ring, Type 2 SPD on the main bus. EIC and Part P Building Control notification for Brent licensing inspector. We coordinate with building management on communal-area work where applicable.
Need a fuse box upgrade for your Wembley Park property?
Fuse Box / Consumer Unit Replacement Wembley Park FAQs
Clear answers to the most common questions Wembley Park homeowners and landlords ask about fuse box replacement and consumer unit upgrades.
For official guidance, visit Electrical Safety First or read the Building Regulations guidance.
My Wembley Park new-build flat already has a consumer unit — why would I need it replaced? ▼
Most Quintain-built Wembley Park flats on Olympic Way and North End Road and the Tipi-managed rental blocks were wired between 2012 and 2020 with developer-spec dual-RCD boards. They were sized to the day-one circuit count: kitchen ring, two socket rings, lighting, immersion. EV chargers in the basement bays, heat pumps retrofitted to balconies, smart-home hubs and home-office circuits all push the original board beyond its design margin. The replacement isn't fixing a fault — it's giving you the spare ways to use the flat for what it's actually being used for now, and to satisfy block-management's EV-charging policy when it comes in.
Developer wired my Wembley Park flat with dual-RCD — is that actually compliant? ▼
Compliant when fitted — yes, dual-RCD boards met BS 7671 17th and early 18th Edition rules, and that's what the Quintain blocks from 2012-2018 were wired to. It still meets the minimum today, and an EICR won't fail you on the topology alone. The practical issue: every circuit on the same RCD trips together. On a 12-way Wembley Park dual-RCD board that's typically 5-6 circuits — kitchen, sockets, immersion, lighting — going down at once for a single fault. Quintain's current new-builds (and any Tipi-spec retrofit) now use full-RCBO. Replacing yours brings it to the same standard.
EV charger T-offed from my meter tails in Wembley Park — is that legal? ▼
No — it's a clear EICR fail. Tapping an EV charger off the meter tails before the consumer unit means the charger circuit has no MCB or RCBO protection at the board, isn't certified as part of the installation, and bypasses every layer of fault detection BS 7671 requires. Common on Wembley Park basement bays where a third-party EV installer has done a quick retrofit without engaging Quintain's block electrician. Correct install: dedicated way on the consumer unit, appropriate RCBO type for the charger's DC fault behaviour, Type 2 SPD, separate EIC, UK Power Networks notification if the additional load takes the flat past its agreed supply.
What's the difference between RCD and RCBO consumer units? Which one do I need? ▼
Both protect against electric shock and electrical fire. The difference is granularity.
- RCD consumer unit (typically dual-RCD): Two big trip switches, each protecting a group of circuits. If one circuit faults, the whole RCD group trips — you lose the kitchen, lights, and sockets together.
- RCBO consumer unit (one RCBO per circuit): Each circuit has its own combined trip switch. If the kitchen socket faults, only that circuit goes off — the rest stay live.
Why we recommend RCBO for most Wembley Park installs:
- Faster fault diagnosis — you know immediately which circuit is faulty
- Less disruption — one bad iron doesn't kill the whole upstairs lighting
- Better with modern electronics — RCBOs are more sensitive and reliable
When dual-RCD is fine: small flats with simple circuit layouts, properties on a tight budget, short-term landlord-let where cost beats convenience.
Cost difference: typically £150 between dual-RCD (£800) and full RCBO (£950). For most homeowners we recommend the RCBO upgrade — it pays for itself the first time a fault localises rather than killing half the house.
Do I really need a metal consumer unit, or is a plastic fuse box OK? ▼
This is the most common scare we see in Wembley Park — the fear-driven upsell to landlords.
Honest answer: plastic fuse boxes fitted before 1 January 2016 are still legal and don't automatically fail an EICR. They were the standard at the time of fitting. They become a problem only when:
- The plastic enclosure shows signs of overheating or burn marks (genuine C2)
- The board has no RCD protection on socket circuits (the fail reason isn't the plastic — it's the missing RCDs)
- The original installation was non-compliant when fitted
Since 1 January 2016, all new consumer units in domestic properties must be made of non-combustible material (typically metal). This is a forward-looking requirement — your existing plastic fuseboard doesn't get retrofitted just because the rules changed for new installs.
What you should worry about: not the colour of the box. Worry about RCD coverage, the age of the wiring, whether the existing fuse box has been properly maintained, and whether your EICR has C1/C2 codes against the consumer unit specifically. If an electrician quotes you for "a metal consumer unit because plastic fails EICR" without that nuance — get a second opinion.
Do I need freeholder or block-management approval for a fuse box change in Wembley Park? ▼
Yes — Quintain's Wembley Park leases and the Tipi-managed rental blocks both require written consent before any work touching the consumer unit, and Quintain typically wants the work either supervised or signed off by their nominated electrical contractor at leaseholder expense. The lease clause is under 'alterations to fixed wiring'. We submit the proposed scope (board type, circuit count, RCBO/AFDD arrangement, certification path) on a single PDF to Quintain or Tipi at least 2 weeks before the install. Approval takes 1-3 weeks. Skipping it can void buildings insurance and create a problem on a later sale.
Will my old wiring still work with a new fuse box? ▼
Almost always yes. The new consumer unit is the brain; your existing circuits are the nervous system. We connect to your existing circuit cables — they don't get rewired.
What we test before we commit:
- Insulation resistance on every circuit (must be at or above 1MΩ; healthy 1990s+ installs typically read above 200MΩ)
- Earth continuity — needed for RCD/RCBO to work safely
- Loop impedance — the circuit's ability to clear a fault
If a circuit fails any of these tests, we tell you before we commit. Options:
- Single circuit fix (£100-£300) — repair the fault and continue
- Targeted partial rewire of just that circuit (£300-£600)
- Hold the upgrade and discuss whether a partial or full rewire is now better value
Common Wembley Park scenarios where wiring fails: 1950s-60s rubber-insulated cable in upstairs lighting circuits (Empire Way and Empire Way period properties), borrowed neutrals from DIY work, undersized cables on extension circuits.
We never "just power it back up" with a circuit that failed testing — that's how fires start. Honest tradeoffs only.
I've been quoted £800. What if extra issues come up during the install — does the price go up? ▼
Honest answer: the £800 is fixed for the standard scope. Any extras are quoted upfront, never sprung on you mid-install.
What's covered in £800 (no surprise add-ons):
- The new consumer unit / fuse board (quality metal, 6-10 ways)
- RCD protection on socket and lighting circuits
- Re-terminating every existing circuit, properly labelled
- Full insulation, earth, and RCD testing on every circuit
- The Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC)
- Plaster patching with bonding plaster around the install
What CAN add to the price (we tell you before we start, with a fixed quote):
- Circuits failing insulation testing — we'll show you the readings, and you decide: targeted repair (£100-£300 per circuit) or hold the upgrade for a partial rewire conversation
- Incoming supply needs upgrading — rare; happens when adding heavy load like an EV charger or heat pump. We tell you upfront if your supply is borderline
- You opt for the premium tier — £950 (RCBO every circuit + surge protection) or £1,200+ (larger split-load board)
What we never do: discover a "problem" mid-install and charge you for it without your sign-off first. If we find something during testing, work pauses until you've decided. No scope creep.
How do I check if my Wembley Park flat's supply can carry a heat pump or EV charger? ▼
Three checks. First — read the main cutout fuse in the meter cupboard (60A, 80A or 100A). Most Wembley Park Quintain-built flats from 2012-2018 were energised at 80A. Second — work out the new load with diversity applied: a 7 kW EV charger sits at 30A continuous, an air-source heat pump is typically 16-25A, and your existing kitchen ring is 32A. Three of those together — common scenario for a 2-bed flat doing EV + ASHP retrofits — pushes an 80A cutout into trouble. Third — request a supply uplift from UK Power Networks if the math comes out short. Residential uplifts to 80A are usually free, over 80A is chargeable and the lead time is 6-12 weeks.
Smart-home loads tripping my new Wembley Park consumer unit — what's the fix? ▼
Almost always cumulative earth leakage on a dual-RCD board. Class I smart devices — Wi-Fi router, smart hub, smart TV, induction hob, EV charger, smart lighting drivers — each leak a small amount to earth (0.5-1 mA each). On a Wembley Park Quintain dual-RCD board with 5-6 circuits per RCD, that total adds up across all the devices on the same bank and crosses the 30 mA threshold. Nothing is actually faulty. Two fixes: rebalance device positions across the two RCD banks (short-term), or replace the board with a full-RCBO unit so leakage is per-circuit not cumulative (permanent fix).
Will the new consumer unit be ready for an EV charger, heat pump, or smart home? ▼
Yes — and we set up Wembley Park consumer units for it as standard. What we include:
- Spare 32A way on the fuseboard, labelled and ready for a 7kW or 22kW EV charger install
- Adequate supply headroom — we check your incoming supply and tell you upfront if a heat pump or EV charger needs a supply upgrade (often the headroom is fine, but worth confirming)
- SPD (surge protection) on the premium tier (£950) — protects every modern electronic in the house from voltage spikes
- Smart-home-ready circuits — neutrals to switch positions if you specify (most period houses don't have these, blocking smart switch installs later)
What gets retrofitted later costs more. Adding an EV charger circuit to an existing fuse box: £400-£600 extra labour because we need to chase walls, lift floor coverings, and isolate the supply again. Specifying it during the consumer unit upgrade: marginal cost only.
Tell us at the survey stage what you might add in the next 5 years — EV, heat pump, hot tub, garden room, second EV charger, home office. We size the board around your plans, not just your current circuits.
Will the consumer unit upgrade damage my walls or decoration? ▼
Almost never. Unlike a rewire, a consumer unit replacement is contained to the meter cupboard — usually under the stairs, in a hallway recess, or in a kitchen cupboard. The work stays in that one spot.
What we do during the install:
- Disconnect existing circuits at the old fuse box, label every cable
- Remove the old fuseboard from its mounting point
- Mount the new consumer unit in the same position (same screw holes where possible)
- Re-terminate every circuit into the new board
- Test, certify, and label every circuit on the new unit's chart
What we don't do:
- Chase walls
- Lift floorboards (unless an existing cable is too short to reach the new connection point — rare)
- Disturb skirting, sockets, or switches anywhere else in the house
- Affect any decoration outside the meter cupboard
The only plaster work: if the new board is a different physical size than the old one, we may need to patch a small area of bonding plaster around the mounting position. That's included; finishing coats and any decoration are a decorator's job.
Wembley Park properties with the original fuse box in a tight under-stairs space sometimes need a little extra work to fit a wider modern board — we'll show you the position before we start so you can decide whether to keep it where it is or relocate.
Nearby North London areas we cover for fuse box / consumer unit replacement
Need a Fuse Box / Consumer Unit Replacement
in Wembley Park?
Professional fuse box replacement and consumer unit installation across Wembley Park HA9 / HA9 and surrounding areas of the London Borough of Brent. Free site survey, fixed prices, fully certified BS 7671 18th Ed Amendment 2.
































