EICR Testing and Inspection Edmonton
Landlord compliance, tenant safety certificates, or house sale requirements in Edmonton? We deliver EICR reports within 48 hours — testing, certification and electrical repairs quotes all sorted.
Why Choose Rudi Electrics
for EICR Testing Edmonton?
Your concerns answered — here’s why Edmonton landlords and homeowners trust us for EICR testing.
“Are your electricians properly qualified?”
Qualified electricians with 15+ years experience conducting EICR inspections. We’re fully BS 7671 18th Edition compliant and carry out every test to the latest regulations — your certificate will be accepted anywhere.
“How quickly can I get the report?”
48-hour report turnaround guaranteed. We understand landlords need compliance fast and house sales can’t wait. Test completed, report written, certificate issued — all within 2 working days.
“What if you find faults during testing?”
We provide a clear, itemised remedial quote on the spot — no vague estimates or delays. If you want the repairs done, we can often fix minor issues the same day and return for bigger work within 48 hours.
“Will the report be accepted by my agent/solicitor?”
✓ Yes. You’ll receive a comprehensive EICR certificate with full test results for every circuit, coded observations (urgent electrical repairs/C2/C3), and recommendations. Fully compliant with landlord regulations and accepted by all letting agents and conveyancers.
EICR Testing in Edmonton N9 & N18
Edmonton is our home base — we operate directly from N18, which means we’re on site faster here than anywhere else. The housing stock across N9 and N18 is a mix of post-war council estates, 1930s terraces around Fore Street and Hertford Road, and Victorian properties near the North Circular. EICR demand in Edmonton is high — we test regularly for landlords with HMO properties across the area, and for homeowners buying or remortgaging who need a certificate.
Most Edmonton terraces are 3-bed properties — standard EICR testing takes 2–3 hours. Older properties near Fore Street with original fuse boards may take slightly longer, and we’ll always flag any issues clearly with a written quote for any remedial work needed before starting. We cover Edmonton as part of our wider EICR testing service across North London. For general electrical work in Edmonton, see our electrician Edmonton page.
What Our Customers Say About Us
Real reviews from homeowners across Edmonton. Live Google reviews below — for all 358+ reviews across review platforms, see our testimonials page →
Book Your EICR Inspection in Edmonton
Tell us about your Edmonton property and we'll get back to you within 24 hours with a fixed price quote.
Fully Qualified
All EICRs carried out by a qualified electrician — fully compliant with BS 7671 and accepted by landlords, letting agents, and mortgage lenders.
48-Hour Certificate
Your signed EICR report is delivered within 48 hours of the inspection — digital and paper copies available.
All Property Types
Houses, flats, HMOs, rental properties, commercial premises — we test all property types across North London.
From £180
Fixed prices agreed before we start. From £180 for a standard domestic EICR — no surprises.
🔒 Your details are kept private and never shared. We'll call within 24 hours.
How We Complete Your
EICR Inspection
Professional EICR testing Edmonton from start to finish. Most inspections are completed in 2–4 hours depending on property size, with reports delivered within 48 hours.
Initial Assessment
We review your property details, identify the consumer unit type, count circuits, and discuss any known issues requiring urgent attention or concerns you have with the electrical installation.
Visual Inspection
Complete visual examination of all accessible wiring, switches, sockets, consumer unit upgrade condition, earthing and bonding arrangements, and identification of any visible damage or deterioration.
Dead Testing
With circuits isolated, we test continuity of protective conductors, ring final circuit continuity, insulation resistance, and polarity. These tests verify the installation’s basic integrity.
Live Testing
With power restored, we measure earth fault loop impedance, RCD trip times, and verify correct operation of all protective devices. This confirms the installation will disconnect safely under fault conditions.
Assessment & Classification
We classify any observations as C1 (danger - immediate action), C2 (potentially dangerous), C3 (improvement recommended), or FI (further investigation). We’ll explain findings on-site before leaving.
Report & Certificate
Your detailed EICR report is delivered within 48 hours. Includes all test results, observations, photos, recommendations, and official certificate for rental and safety documentation.
EICR Testing Pricing Across Edmonton
Fixed prices with no hidden costs. You'll always receive a fixed price before testing starts.
- ✓ Full visual inspection
- ✓ Dead and live testing
- ✓ Consumer unit inspection
- ✓ Detailed report within 48hrs
- ✓ Certificate included
- ★ Full visual inspection
- ★ Dead and live testing
- ★ Consumer unit inspection
- ★ Detailed report within 48hrs
- ★ Certificate included
- ★ Priority scheduling
- ✓ Full visual inspection
- ✓ Dead and live testing
- ✓ Consumer unit inspection
- ✓ Detailed report within 48hrs
- ✓ Certificate included
- ✓ Same-day quote
EICR Testing Across All Property Types in Edmonton
From the Victorian terraces of Fore Street to the regeneration developments at Meridian Water — we've completed electrical safety inspections across Edmonton N9 and N18. Here's how we approach each property type.
Victorian & Edwardian Terraces
📍 Upper Edmonton N18, Fore Street, Hertford Road, Bounces Road
Edmonton's Victorian and Edwardian terrace stock is dense — long rows of 1890s–1910s properties, many still running rubber-insulated or cloth-covered wiring. No RCD protection, no earthing, ceramic fuse boxes, and single ring mains serving whole properties. High landlord concentration means circuits are often added without assessment. EICR failures with C1 and C2 codes are routine on first inspection.
Thorough periodic inspection with detailed schedule of observations — identifying all C1 (danger present), C2 (potentially dangerous) and C3 (improvement recommended) items. Clear remedial work schedule with costs. Landlord certificates accepted by Enfield Council for HMO and single-let licensing. Most Edmonton terraces complete in 3–4 hours.
1930s–1950s Semis & Council Properties
📍 Montagu Road, Durham Road, Silver Street, Plevna Road, Chesterfield Road
Interwar and post-war Edmonton — council-built semis and private housing across N9 and N18. Original 1950s–60s rubber-insulated wiring still in place in many properties. Solid concrete ground floors in council properties make it difficult to assess wiring condition without intrusive investigation. Mixed standards from decades of DIY additions and partial upgrades.
Full periodic inspection to BS 7671 — we assess all accessible circuits, check RCD operation, test insulation resistance, and verify earthing. For solid-floor properties we use non-intrusive testing methods wherever possible. EICR certificates issued same day. Remedial works completed at a separate visit with full re-test.
Post-War Flats & Regeneration Developments
📍 Meridian Water N18, Edmonton Green, Angel Edmonton, Advent Way
Older Edmonton blocks from the 1960s–80s typically have no RCD protection, outdated consumer units, and wiring that's never been inspected. Meridian Water's new developments may have developer wiring with snag-list electrical issues. Landlords in both old and new blocks need valid EICR certificates for compliance with Enfield Council licensing requirements.
Flat EICR with managing agent coordination — we access and test all circuits within the flat boundary. For older blocks we note any communal earthing or supply issues that are the freeholder's responsibility. EICR certificates issued for each individual flat for landlord licensing compliance. We cover blocks of all sizes across Edmonton.
HMO & Multi-Occupancy Properties
📍 Throughout Edmonton N9 and N18 — HMOs, bedsits, shared houses
Edmonton has a high HMO concentration. These properties frequently have multiple consumer units, unprotected circuits added over the years, inadequate separation between tenant areas, and overloaded ring mains. EICR inspections on HMOs regularly uncover C1 coded items requiring immediate remediation before the property can be re-licensed.
HMO-specific EICR covering all circuits across the entire property — including any sub-boards, outbuilding circuits, and communal area wiring. We identify all non-compliances clearly and produce a remedial schedule the landlord can act on immediately. Remedial works available at the same visit where urgent C1 items are identified. Certificates accepted by Enfield Council.
Need an EICR in Edmonton?
EICR Testing FAQs for Edmonton Landlords
Clear answers to the most common questions landlords and homeowners ask about EICR testing, electrical installation condition reports, and landlord electrical compliance in Edmonton.
For official guidance, visit Electrical Safety First or read the government's landlord guidance.
What exactly is an EICR, and what does it cover? ▼
An EICR (Electrical Installation Condition Report) is a thorough check of every electrical circuit, socket, switch, and the consumer unit in a property — to confirm the wiring is safe and meets current British Standard (BS 7671). It's a multi-page document with test data and photos, not just a quick visual check.
What we test:
- Consumer unit, earthing, and main bonding
- Every circuit (lighting, sockets, dedicated)
- RCD protection and trip times
- Insulation resistance and earth-loop impedance on every circuit
- A sample of accessories (sockets, switches, light fittings)
- Cable conditions where accessible
What an EICR does not cover: appliances (those need PAT testing) and smoke/heat alarms (separate test, but we can do both at the same visit).
What does an EICR cost in Edmonton? Why are quotes so different? ▼
Our Edmonton pricing:
- Standard EICR (most 1-3 bed flats and houses): £180
- Landlord pack / 4+ bed or HMO (full report, fast turnaround, council-ready): £230
Why other quotes vary so wildly: a proper EICR takes 3-4 hours on a 3-bed property. Anyone offering £49 or £75 EICRs is doing a cursory visual check — they don't open sockets, don't measure insulation resistance on every circuit, don't pressure-test the earth. The certificate they hand you may say "satisfactory" while real C2 failures hide. Worse, it's worthless if Enfield Council asks for the test data — there isn't any.
What's included in our price: full inspection, written report with every observation coded, all measured test data, photos where helpful, and 48-hour certificate turnaround.
How long does an EICR take, and what happens during the inspection? ▼
For a typical 3-bed Edmonton property, allow 3-4 hours. Smaller flats are 2-2.5 hours; HMOs and 4+ bed properties take 4-5+ hours.
What happens during the visit:
- We'll need access to every room with electrics
- Each circuit is dead-tested (power off briefly per circuit, 5-15 minutes each)
- Sockets and switches are sampled and opened to check terminations
- The consumer unit is opened and inspected
- We test earthing, main bonding, and RCD operation
- We may need to access the loft and the meter cupboard
Power isolation: only OFF for short stretches per circuit while testing. The fridge stays on, the Wi-Fi router stays up. We give you a heads-up before each isolation so nothing important gets affected.
What you need to do: nothing special. Clear access to the consumer unit, leave us a key, and we'll lock up after.
Do I legally need an EICR? (Landlord, homeowner, buyer, or seller) ▼
The legal requirement only bites on rented property. Quick segment guide:
- Landlord (private rented): Legally required every 5 years, AND at every change of tenancy, AND before any new tenancy starts. Enforced by your local authority (Enfield Council is active on this in Edmonton, especially in N9 and N18 HMOs).
- Owner-occupier (you live there): Not legally required. Recommended every 10 years or after any major electrical change.
- Buyer (pre-purchase): Not required by law, but increasingly requested by mortgage lenders and solicitors. Strong negotiation tool if it fails.
- Seller: Not legally required, but solicitors and buyer surveys increasingly ask for one. A clean EICR speeds up sales.
Edmonton has a particularly high concentration of HMOs and landlord-let stock — Enfield Council has been active with EICR enforcement, with civil penalties issued for non-compliance.
My EICR came back "unsatisfactory" — what do C1, C2, C3, and FI codes mean? ▼
Don't panic — "unsatisfactory" is a technical word, not a fire alarm. It means at least one C1, C2, or FI code was found, but those letters mean very different things:
- C1 — Danger present: Real, immediate danger (exposed live conductors, missing earth on a gas-bonded pipe). We isolate the circuit on the spot. Rare in modern wiring, more common in pre-1960s installations.
- C2 — Potentially dangerous: Could become dangerous (missing RCD on a bathroom circuit, accessible bare cable in a loft, undersized earth). Must be fixed within 28 days for landlords. Most common reason an EICR fails in Edmonton.
- C3 — Improvement recommended: Doesn't meet current regs but isn't dangerous (e.g., plastic consumer unit where modern is metal). C3 alone does NOT fail an EICR.
- FI — Further investigation: Inspector spotted something they couldn't fully test on the day. Needs a follow-up visit, not a fail.
A report with only C3 and no other codes is satisfactory. Many "failed" EICRs are just one C2 — usually a missing RCD that's a £180-£300 fix, not a rewire.
What's the 28-day rule? What does a landlord do after a failed EICR? ▼
The clock starts the day you receive the unsatisfactory report.
In order:
- Within 28 days — complete all C1, C2, and FI remedial work (or sooner if the report specifies — sometimes 7 or 14 days for genuine hazards)
- Within 28 days of the work completing — get written confirmation from a qualified electrician that the remedial work is done (we issue this as part of the remedial visit)
- Within 28 days of the work completing — provide that confirmation + the original EICR + the remedial certificate to your tenant
- On request — provide the same documents to your local authority
What happens if you don't comply: civil penalties up to £30,000, possible HMO licence consequences, and the council can arrange the work themselves and recover costs from you. Enfield Council does enforce — Edmonton landlords (particularly N9 and N18 HMO operators) have been hit. Don't ignore the report.
My EICR failed — does that mean I need a full rewire? ▼
Almost never. In our experience across Edmonton properties, around 90% of failed EICRs are fixed with targeted remedial work, not a rewire. The most common fixes:
- No RCD protection on circuits → consumer unit upgrade (£800-£1,200, often fixes the whole report)
- Missing main bonding to incoming gas/water → 1-day remedial job (£200-£400)
- Damaged sockets or switches → replace just the damaged accessories (£20-£50 per item)
- Borrowed neutrals in lighting circuits → targeted lighting circuit rewire (£300-£600)
- Burned or damaged cable section → replace that section only (£200-£500)
A full rewire is only justified when:
- Most circuits are running pre-1970s rubber or cloth-covered cables (common on Fore Street and Bounces Road period properties)
- The report flags multiple C1/C2 codes across the majority of circuits
Send us the failed report and we'll give you a straight read: targeted remedial, partial rewire, or full rewire — and the actual price for each option.
I'm buying a house in Edmonton — should I get an EICR before exchange? ▼
Yes, almost always. An EICR before exchange (£180) is one of the cheapest insurance policies in the buying process.
Why it's worth it:
- Mortgage lender comfort — some lenders ask, others appreciate a clean report
- Solicitor sign-off — buyer's solicitor's electrical-related comments get resolved without back-and-forth
- Real evidence to negotiate — if the report shows C1 or C2 codes, you can drop your offer by the cost of remedial work (typically £1,500-£8,000)
- Peace of mind — avoids buying into hidden electrical problems
Best practice: book the EICR after the homebuyer's survey comes back, before exchange. Booking-to-report turnaround is usually 2-3 days. We'll send the EICR directly to you (and your solicitor if you want).
Trap to avoid: don't accept a "vendor's EICR" that's more than 12 months old, or one done by an electrician you can't verify. Pay the £180, get your own.
I'm selling my Edmonton home — do I need an EICR? Will it help my sale? ▼
Not legally required, but increasingly worth the £180-£230.
Why sellers are getting one before listing:
- Solicitors are asking — slows or even kills sales when there isn't one
- Buyer surveys routinely ask "is there a current electrical certificate?" — having one removes that objection upfront
- Lenders are starting to ask
- You catch problems early — if it comes back unsatisfactory, you've got time to fix it (or price it in) before a buyer's solicitor finds it for you
When you don't need to bother: if you've just done a full rewire (the EIC from the install covers it), or you're selling at auction.
If your Edmonton home is 10+ years from its last electrical work, an EICR before listing is usually the smarter move. We can usually fit a survey within a few days.
How often do I need an EICR? ▼
Depends on who you are and the property:
- Landlord (rental property): Every 5 years, AND at every change of tenancy, AND before any new tenancy starts. (UK Electrical Safety Standards 2020.)
- HMO landlord: Same 5-year rule, but Enfield Council may ask annually as part of HMO licensing — check your specific licence.
- Owner-occupier (you live there): Every 10 years recommended, or sooner after any major electrical work.
- After major works: After an extension, kitchen rewire, or any significant electrical change — even if you got an EIC for the new work, an EICR confirms the rest of the system is still safe.
- Commercial property: Every 5 years, or 1-3 years for high-risk environments.
If you're not sure when the last EICR was, check your house papers. We can also check the consumer unit for an EIC sticker dated by the last electrician.
Should I get an EICR after a kitchen extension, DIY electrical work, or any wiring changes? ▼
Yes — and it's smarter than skipping it.
Common scenarios where an EICR catches things:
- After an extension or kitchen renovation: The new circuits get an EIC (Electrical Installation Certificate), but that only covers what was newly installed. An EICR confirms the rest of the house wasn't disturbed or compromised by the building work.
- After DIY electrical work: Anything beyond a like-for-like switch swap is technically Part P notifiable. If you (or a previous owner) added sockets, wired in a hob, or rewired a room without certification, an EICR finds what's safe and what isn't.
- Before letting (if you've previously been an owner-occupier): Required before the first tenancy — and you want to know what's there before tenants move in.
- Before insurance claims: Some insurers want a current EICR before paying out on electrical-fire claims.
Common discoveries we make on these inspections in Edmonton: borrowed neutrals from DIY, undersized cables on extension circuits, unbonded gas pipes after kitchen replacements. Cheap to fix when caught early; expensive once they cause a fault.
What does the EICR certificate actually show, and what do I send to tenants, buyers, or my lender? ▼
The EICR pack we send is a full PDF containing:
- The certificate front page — your details, the property, electrician qualification, "satisfactory" or "unsatisfactory" verdict
- All observations coded C1, C2, C3, or FI — with the location and reason
- Test data — insulation resistance, earth-loop impedance, RCD trip times, on every circuit
- Photos where they help explain a finding (damaged cable, missing RCD, etc.)
- Recommendations — what's needed to bring an unsatisfactory report up to satisfactory
What you forward to whom:
- Tenants — full EICR within 28 days (plus any subsequent remedial certificates)
- Local authority (Enfield Council) — same documents on request
- Buyer's solicitor — full EICR if requested during conveyancing
- Mortgage lender — some ask for a current EICR before completion
We keep originals on file indefinitely. If you lose your copy, we re-issue free.
Need an EICR
in Edmonton?
Fast, compliant testing across Edmonton N9, N18. Next-day appointments available with reports delivered in 48 hours guaranteed.
































