Office trunking and twin sockets in a commercial fit-out tested by CJA Electrical

CJA Electrical does commercial EICR and fixed wire testing across Canterbury and the wider Canterbury area. The legal framework for commercial premises is the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 — and the EICR (also called fixed wire testing or periodic inspection) is the standard documentary evidence that the duty-holder is meeting that obligation. Whether you’re an office tenant, a retail unit operator, or a building owner with multi-tenanted commercial property, the inspection runs out of our Rochester base.

What Commercial EICR actually is

The technical name for what most Canterbury commercial clients call “fixed wire testing” is a periodic EICR — Electrical Installation Condition Report — to BS 7671. It documents the condition of the building’s permanent electrical installation at a specific point in time and identifies any departures from the current wiring regulations. The point of the document is twofold. First, it’s the duty-holder’s primary evidence of compliance with the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989. Second, it’s a maintenance planning tool — the C2 and C3 observations form the punchlist of work the building needs over the next inspection cycle to stay compliant.

When you need Commercial EICR in Canterbury

There’s no single statutory cycle for commercial EICRs the way there is for domestic landlord property — the duty-holder works to IET Guidance Note 3 and to whatever the insurer’s policy schedule requires. Most policy schedules across Canterbury reference five-year intervals as standard, with shorter cycles where the building has higher inherent risk. What we see most often in Canterbury is the renewal trigger — the insurer asks for a current certificate at the policy anniversary, the building’s last EICR is more than five years old, and we get called in to bring it back into date. Other common triggers: a new tenant on the lease, a CDM-flagged fit-out completion, a refurbished consumer unit that needs documenting against the new circuits.

Multi-occupancy meter cupboard with separate consumer units and smart meters
Multi-occupancy meter cupboard with separate consumer units and smart meters

Standards and what compliance looks like

Fixed wire testing is governed by BS 7671 — the IET Wiring Regulations — which sets the technical requirements for what gets tested and to what tolerances. The legal duty to actually do the testing comes from the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989, specifically Regulation 4(2) (maintenance of electrical systems to prevent danger) and Regulation 16 (employer’s duty to ensure competent persons do the work). The inspection criteria, frequency guidance, and the format of the written report all follow IET Guidance Note 3. Canterbury City Council and the HSE both reference Guidance Note 3 in their compliance expectations for commercial premises.

Testing schedule and remedials

Each circuit is tested in turn. Dead testing — with the circuit isolated — covers continuity of protective and bonding conductors, insulation resistance, polarity, and (for ring finals) ring continuity. Live testing — with the supply restored — covers earth fault loop impedance, prospective fault current, and RCD operating times. Every measurement is recorded on a schedule of test results and lodged with the certificate. Findings are recorded against observation codes (C1, C2, C3, FI) with a note against each. The summary on the front of the certificate gives an overall verdict — satisfactory or unsatisfactory — based on whether any C1 or C2 observations are present. C3 observations alone don’t make a report unsatisfactory; they’re recommendations rather than failures.

Main service fuse, cutout and smart meter on the incoming supply
Main service fuse, cutout and smart meter on the incoming supply

Why Canterbury property owners book CJA Electrical

We work with commercial clients across Canterbury the same way we work with domestic clients: same-day quotes, clear communication on what the inspection involves, transparent pricing, and a written report inside 48 hours. The difference on commercial is just the scheduling — most jobs run outside trading hours or in phased blocks during quieter periods. Reports are formatted to the standard BS 7671 template that insurers, managing agents, and HSE inspectors expect. Remedial work — if the report is unsatisfactory — is quoted separately so the duty-holder can plan the budget and prioritise C1 and C2 observations first.

How the work runs

First contact: a five-minute call to scope the premises. We need to know roughly what the installation looks like — number of distribution boards, three-phase or single-phase, number of circuits, whether there’s any specialist equipment (server rooms, plant, kitchens) that needs handling carefully. Most quotes go out within 24 hours of the initial call. Booking: testing scheduled around your hours. Most Canterbury offices are tested outside business hours; retail units are usually done early morning or evenings; workshops and industrial premises are sometimes done in phased blocks weekend-by-weekend if the building can’t shut down at all. Reporting: PDF within 48 hours, formatted to BS 7671 Appendix 6, with the schedule of test results, schedule of inspections, and observations all in the standard format insurers and managing agents expect to see.

What affects the price

Pricing is transparent: a fixed price for the inspection and report, separate quoting for any remedial work. The fixed price is set after a quick scoping conversation about the installation — circuit count, board count, three-phase or single-phase, any specialist equipment to handle. What the price includes: the on-site inspection, dead and live testing, schedule of test results, BS 7671-formatted report, PDF delivery within 48 hours. What’s separate: remedial work (quoted line-by-line against the report observations), any re-testing needed after remedials are completed, and any additional reports if the duty-holder wants the original split into board-specific certificates.

FAQs

What’s a sampling EICR and is it appropriate for our building?

Sampling is when the duty-holder specifies a percentage (often 10–20%) of circuits and accessories to be tested rather than 100%. The remaining circuits are visually inspected only. The sample is documented on the report and the duty-holder accepts responsibility for the un-tested portion. Appropriate for large, low-risk premises on tight inspection cycles. For most Canterbury commercial, full testing is the right call.

Who’s legally responsible — landlord or tenant?

Depends on the lease. In a typical full-repairing-and-insuring (FRI) commercial lease the tenant carries the duty for the installation within the demise. In shorter leases the landlord usually retains the duty. For multi-tenanted buildings, the landlord normally holds the duty for shared common parts and main supply. We can read the lease with you on a quick call and clarify who needs to commission the EICR.

How long does a commercial EICR take?

Half a day for a small Canterbury office (single board, ~20 circuits) up to two or three days for a multi-board industrial unit. Premises that need phased testing across weekends will take longer in calendar time but the same total testing hours. We give a realistic estimate at quoting stage based on the circuit count and access conditions.

What happens if the report comes back unsatisfactory?

Unsatisfactory just means the inspection has flagged C1 or C2 observations — items that need putting right to bring the installation back to compliance. The report lists each item, and CJA Electrical can quote separately for the remedial work. Once the remedials are done, the affected circuits are re-tested and a fresh, satisfactory certificate is issued.

Will the testing damage anything?

No. The tests are non-destructive — insulation resistance and earth fault loop are low-current measurements that don’t stress the installation. The most disruptive part is the brief power cuts during dead testing, which is why we schedule around operations. We do power-down sensitive equipment (servers, control systems) properly before testing the circuits that feed them, and we coordinate with you on anything that can’t be cleanly isolated.

Do you handle three-phase installations?

Yes. Three-phase is normal on commercial Canterbury premises with higher load — workshops, larger offices with mechanical plant, industrial units. Test equipment, methodology, and reporting formats are the same as single-phase but with phase-specific readings recorded on the schedule.

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Frequently asked questions

What's a sampling EICR and is it appropriate for our building?

Sampling is when the duty-holder specifies a percentage (often 10–20%) of circuits and accessories to be tested rather than 100%. The remaining circuits are visually inspected only. The sample is documented on the report and the duty-holder accepts responsibility for the un-tested portion. Appropriate for large, low-risk premises on tight inspection cycles. For most Canterbury commercial, full testing is the right call.

Who's legally responsible — landlord or tenant?

Depends on the lease. In a typical full-repairing-and-insuring (FRI) commercial lease the tenant carries the duty for the installation within the demise. In shorter leases the landlord usually retains the duty. For multi-tenanted buildings, the landlord normally holds the duty for shared common parts and main supply. We can read the lease with you on a quick call and clarify who needs to commission the EICR.

How long does a commercial EICR take?

Half a day for a small Canterbury office (single board, ~20 circuits) up to two or three days for a multi-board industrial unit. Premises that need phased testing across weekends will take longer in calendar time but the same total testing hours. We give a realistic estimate at quoting stage based on the circuit count and access conditions.

What happens if the report comes back unsatisfactory?

Unsatisfactory just means the inspection has flagged C1 or C2 observations — items that need putting right to bring the installation back to compliance. The report lists each item, and CJA Electrical can quote separately for the remedial work. Once the remedials are done, the affected circuits are re-tested and a fresh, satisfactory certificate is issued.

Will the testing damage anything?

No. The tests are non-destructive — insulation resistance and earth fault loop are low-current measurements that don't stress the installation. The most disruptive part is the brief power cuts during dead testing, which is why we schedule around operations. We do power-down sensitive equipment (servers, control systems) properly before testing the circuits that feed them, and we coordinate with you on anything that can't be cleanly isolated.

Do you handle three-phase installations?

Yes. Three-phase is normal on commercial Canterbury premises with higher load — workshops, larger offices with mechanical plant, industrial units. Test equipment, methodology, and reporting formats are the same as single-phase but with phase-specific readings recorded on the schedule.

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