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

Fixed wire testing for offices, retail units, and small workshops in Larkfield. Commercial EICRs sit on a longer cycle than domestic — typically five years for low-risk premises, three for industrial, one for higher-risk environments — and are referenced in IET Guidance Note 3 rather than the residential PRS regulations. The certificate is what insurers ask for at policy renewal and what Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council expects to see if a complaint or incident triggers an inspection.

What Commercial EICR actually is

Fixed wire testing — to use the term most commercial clients in Larkfield are familiar with — is a periodic inspection and test of every circuit in the building’s fixed installation. The inspection has two parts: a visual survey of the consumer unit, distribution boards, and accessible accessories, then dead and live electrical testing on each circuit (continuity, insulation resistance, polarity, earth fault loop, RCD operation). What lands on the report is a formal opinion of whether the installation is satisfactory or unsatisfactory against BS 7671, with each observation coded so the duty-holder knows what’s urgent and what isn’t. C1 means immediate danger, C2 potentially dangerous, C3 improvement recommended, FI further investigation required.

When you need Commercial EICR in Larkfield

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 Maidstone reference five-year intervals as standard, with shorter cycles where the building has higher inherent risk. What we see most often in Larkfield 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.

RCD and loop impedance testing in progress on a domestic circuit
RCD and loop impedance testing in progress on a domestic circuit

Standards and what compliance looks like

BS 7671 is the technical standard for the work itself — what “satisfactory” looks like, what gets tested, the tolerances on each test, the format of the report. The Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 is the law that says the duty-holder must keep the installation safe and provides the framework for prosecution if they don’t. Together they’re the framework Larkfield duty-holders work within. The current edition of BS 7671 is the 18th Edition with Amendment 2 (2022); any EICR signed off after January 2023 should reference that. Reports referring to older editions of BS 7671 are still technically valid for the cycle they were issued in but should be re-tested to current standards on the next inspection.

Testing schedule and remedials

The testing itself splits into dead testing (with the circuit isolated) and live testing (with the supply restored). Dead tests cover continuity of protective conductors, insulation resistance between live and earth, polarity, and ring final continuity on sockets. Live tests cover earth fault loop impedance and RCD operation. Each circuit gets recorded individually on the schedule of test results that accompanies the certificate. On a typical Larkfield commercial installation, the testing takes anywhere from half a day for a small office to two or three days for a multi-board industrial unit. We schedule the work around your trading hours — most offices and workshops can be done outside business hours, and retail units are usually best done early morning before opening.

Multifunction tester measuring end-to-end resistance on a ring final circuit
Multifunction tester measuring end-to-end resistance on a ring final circuit

Why Larkfield property owners book CJA Electrical

We work with commercial clients across Larkfield 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

Step one is a scoping call — usually 10 minutes — to establish the size and complexity of the installation. We’ll ask about the distribution board count, circuit count, three-phase vs single-phase, and any specialist equipment. From that we put a fixed-price quote together, usually within a working day. Step two is the actual testing visit, scheduled to fit around your operations. Most commercial EICRs in Larkfield take half a day to two days on site, depending on the installation size. We can phase the work across multiple visits if the premises can’t sustain a single block of testing. Step three is the report — a PDF within 48 hours of testing completing, with the BS 7671 standard format and all observations coded. If the report is unsatisfactory, step four is a separate remedial quote so you can plan the work to bring the installation back to compliance.

What affects the price

Commercial EICR pricing is driven by the size of the installation — number of circuits, number of distribution boards, total accessory count — and the access conditions. Most Larkfield office EICRs come in as a fixed price after a five-minute scoping call. Industrial premises and multi-board commercial often need a brief site visit before the quote firms up. What’s included in the quote: the inspection, the testing, the written report formatted to BS 7671. What’s quoted separately: any remedial work needed to clear C1 or C2 observations after the report. We don’t bundle remedials into the inspection price — keeping them separate means the duty-holder can shop the remedial quote against other contractors if they want to.

FAQs

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 Larkfield 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.

What documentation do I get at the end?

The Electrical Installation Condition Report itself (front page with verdict, schedule of inspections, schedule of test results, list of observations) as a single PDF. We can split it into board-specific certificates if you need separate documents for individual tenants in a multi-tenanted building. The PDF is what your insurer, Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council, and any future buyer’s surveyor will expect to see.

How often does a commercial EICR need doing?

IET Guidance Note 3 is the reference. Five years is standard for offices, retail, and most small commercial in Larkfield. Three years for industrial, educational, and most workshop premises. One year for higher-risk environments — cinemas, swimming pools, places of public assembly. The duty-holder can shorten these intervals based on risk assessment, and most insurers require evidence the building is on cycle.

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Frequently asked questions

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 Larkfield 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.

What documentation do I get at the end?

The Electrical Installation Condition Report itself (front page with verdict, schedule of inspections, schedule of test results, list of observations) as a single PDF. We can split it into board-specific certificates if you need separate documents for individual tenants in a multi-tenanted building. The PDF is what your insurer, Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council, and any future buyer's surveyor will expect to see.

How often does a commercial EICR need doing?

IET Guidance Note 3 is the reference. Five years is standard for offices, retail, and most small commercial in Larkfield. Three years for industrial, educational, and most workshop premises. One year for higher-risk environments — cinemas, swimming pools, places of public assembly. The duty-holder can shorten these intervals based on risk assessment, and most insurers require evidence the building is on cycle.

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