EICR in Dartford
EICR testing in Dartford, with same-week appointments across Dartford.
CJA Electrical does EICR testing across Dartford and the wider Dartford area — landlords ahead of a new tenancy or a 5-yearly recheck, homeowners buying or selling or just due an inspection, and anyone who’s noticed warm sockets, frequent tripping, or a burning smell they can’t explain. Dartford sits within the 40-minute working radius of our Rochester base, so site visits are tight to the diary and reports come back inside 48 hours.
What EICR actually is
“EICR” is short for Electrical Installation Condition Report — the formal documentation of a fixed-wiring inspection at a specific point in time. It tells you the condition of the installation today, lists anything that doesn’t meet current regulations, and gives the property owner a punchlist of what needs putting right. The report is what’s accepted as evidence of compliance — by Dartford Borough Council for landlords subject to the 2020 PRS regulations, by surveyors during a sale, by insurers at renewal, and by managing agents at change of tenancy. Reports formatted to the BS 7671 standard layout are recognised universally across the industry.
When you need EICR in Dartford
The legal driver for most EICRs in Dartford is the Electrical Safety Standards in the Private Rented Sector (England) Regulations 2020 — every privately rented home needs a satisfactory EICR every five years and at the start of any new tenancy. Dartford Borough Council can issue civil penalties of up to £30,000 for non-compliance, so the cycle isn’t optional. For homeowners, the IET recommends a 10-year cycle on owner- occupied property. Beyond that cycle, the common triggers are a sale (buyer’s surveyor flags the electrics), a purchase (buyer wants independent verification), an insurance request, a major renovation, or a noticeable fault — warm sockets, frequent tripping, lights flickering.

Standards and what compliance looks like
BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 is the technical reference behind every EICR. The standard sets out what gets inspected, what gets tested, what tolerances apply to each measurement, and how observations are coded. The 2022 amendment introduced changes around surge protection (now required on most domestic installations), arc fault detection in some circumstances, and updated requirements for outdoor and EV charging circuits. Older installations being inspected today are tested to current standards. That doesn’t mean every pre-2022 installation needs rewiring — observations are coded based on whether the departure from current standards represents an actual safety issue. A consumer unit pre-dating the 2022 amendment that’s otherwise sound is typically a C3 (improvement recommended) rather than a C2 (potentially dangerous).
Fittings and where they go
The visual inspection covers everything accessible without destruction: the consumer unit (cover off, devices and connections inspected), accessories throughout the property (sockets, switches, light fittings, ceiling roses, fan isolators, immersion switches), the meter cupboard, earthing and bonding at the main intake, and any outbuilding distribution boards. Findings are noted with photographs where useful. Common Dartford findings: undersized consumer units missing RCD protection on older lighting circuits; mixed-metallic fittings and chrome sockets that show pitting where there’s been arcing; loose backbox screws on wall sockets; cracked switch plates; unprotected cable runs in loft spaces.

Testing schedule and remedials
All testing uses calibrated multifunction test equipment — insulation resistance, earth fault loop impedance, RCD operation, and continuity all measured against the BS 7671 pass criteria for each test. Calibration certificates are available on request; the equipment is calibrated annually to UKAS standards. On site, the work runs circuit by circuit. Each is isolated, dead-tested, restored, and live-tested before moving on. The customer is kept informed of what’s being tested and any brief power-downs are flagged in advance. Our standard practice is to leave the consumer unit and accessories exactly as we found them once testing is complete.
Why Dartford property owners book CJA Electrical
CJA Electrical is based in Rochester and covers EICR work across Dartford from there. Dartford sits within the 40-minute working radius — close enough that scheduling is tight, return visits for remedial work are easy, and you’re dealing with someone who knows the local stock. We do mostly residential EICR plus increasingly commercial fixed-wire work as the client base has grown. Qualifications: City & Guilds 2391 (Inspection & Testing), 2382 (18th Edition Wiring Regulations), and 2365 (Diploma in Electrical Installation). Calibrated test equipment. Certificates supplied as PDF inside 48 hours. Remedial work quoted separately so the price is clear and you can plan the budget.
How the work runs
Step one — quick chat about the property: how many bedrooms, rough age of the consumer unit, any known issues, any access constraints (tenanted property, occupied during works, working hours preferences). Most quotes are confirmed on that initial call as a fixed price, with larger or unusual properties going to a brief site visit before the quote firms up. Step two — testing visit. Half a day to a full day on site for most domestic property; longer for larger or multi-installation premises. Brief power-downs during dead testing flagged in advance. Step three — the report. PDF inside 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 agents expect to see.
What affects the price
The two factors that move Dartford EICR pricing are circuit count (more circuits = more testing time) and complexity (multiple consumer units, outbuildings, three-phase supplies on commercial property). For straightforward domestic property, the price band is well-established and quoted up-front. What we don’t do: deposits, hidden fees, or surprise charges on the day. The fixed price is what you pay, invoiced on completion. Remedials are separate so the EICR price is the EICR price.
FAQs
What’s the difference between a Satisfactory and Unsatisfactory report?
A satisfactory report has no C1 (immediate danger) or C2 (potentially dangerous) observations. C3 observations (improvement recommended) on their own don’t fail the report. An unsatisfactory report means C1 or C2 observations are present and the installation needs remedial work to bring it back to compliance.
Can you do remedial work on the same visit?
Sometimes — minor remedials (replacing a damaged socket face, tightening a loose connection, fitting a missing blanking plate) can be done on the inspection visit if time and parts allow. Larger remedial work (consumer unit replacement, recircuiting, additional RCD protection) is quoted separately and scheduled as a follow-up.
Will the inspection damage anything?
No. The tests are non-destructive. Insulation resistance and earth fault loop are low-current measurements that don’t stress the installation. Most of the on-site work is visual inspection plus brief electrical testing on each circuit. The only disruption is the short power-downs during dead testing.
How quickly can I get a report after the inspection?
PDF inside 48 hours of testing completing. We can usually turn it around faster (same evening, next morning) if there’s a deadline — landlord renewal, sale exchange, insurance renewal — and we just need to know the deadline up front.
What if I disagree with an observation on the report?
Talk to us. Each observation has reasoning behind the coding — usually clear regulatory references — and we’ll walk through any specific item if you want to understand the call. Genuine reconsideration on borderline calls is fine; we don’t dig in for the sake of it.
Does an EICR cover gas, water, or appliances?
No. The EICR is a fixed-wiring inspection only — the consumer unit and circuits, plus accessories like sockets and switches. Gas certification is a Gas Safe registered engineer’s job; water leak detection is a plumber’s; appliance testing (PAT testing) is a separate service. We can refer to trusted local trades for any of those.
What if my property has more than one consumer unit?
Common in larger Dartford properties — main board plus a garage or outbuilding sub-board, occasionally a separate board for a flat conversion or annexe. Each board is inspected separately and gets its own schedule of test results. The price reflects the additional testing time; we’ll confirm a fixed all-in number at quoting stage.
Related services in Dartford
- Landlord EICR in Dartford
- Emergency in Dartford
- Alarms in Dartford
- Emergency Lighting in Dartford
- Commercial EICR in Dartford
- Outdoor Lighting in Dartford
EICR in nearby towns
- EICR in Longfield — Dartford
- EICR in Gravesend — Gravesham
- EICR in Northfleet — Gravesham
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between a Satisfactory and Unsatisfactory report?
A satisfactory report has no C1 (immediate danger) or C2 (potentially dangerous) observations. C3 observations (improvement recommended) on their own don't fail the report. An unsatisfactory report means C1 or C2 observations are present and the installation needs remedial work to bring it back to compliance.
Can you do remedial work on the same visit?
Sometimes — minor remedials (replacing a damaged socket face, tightening a loose connection, fitting a missing blanking plate) can be done on the inspection visit if time and parts allow. Larger remedial work (consumer unit replacement, recircuiting, additional RCD protection) is quoted separately and scheduled as a follow-up.
Will the inspection damage anything?
No. The tests are non-destructive. Insulation resistance and earth fault loop are low-current measurements that don't stress the installation. Most of the on-site work is visual inspection plus brief electrical testing on each circuit. The only disruption is the short power-downs during dead testing.
How quickly can I get a report after the inspection?
PDF inside 48 hours of testing completing. We can usually turn it around faster (same evening, next morning) if there's a deadline — landlord renewal, sale exchange, insurance renewal — and we just need to know the deadline up front.
What if I disagree with an observation on the report?
Talk to us. Each observation has reasoning behind the coding — usually clear regulatory references — and we'll walk through any specific item if you want to understand the call. Genuine reconsideration on borderline calls is fine; we don't dig in for the sake of it.
Does an EICR cover gas, water, or appliances?
No. The EICR is a fixed-wiring inspection only — the consumer unit and circuits, plus accessories like sockets and switches. Gas certification is a Gas Safe registered engineer's job; water leak detection is a plumber's; appliance testing (PAT testing) is a separate service. We can refer to trusted local trades for any of those.
What if my property has more than one consumer unit?
Common in larger Dartford properties — main board plus a garage or outbuilding sub-board, occasionally a separate board for a flat conversion or annexe. Each board is inspected separately and gets its own schedule of test results. The price reflects the additional testing time; we'll confirm a fixed all-in number at quoting stage.
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