EICR for Homeowners in Dover, Kent
A private homeowner EICR isn’t legally required in the same way a landlord EICR is, but the IET recommends one every ten years on owner-occupied property — sooner if there’s been a major renovation, water ingress, or the consumer unit has reached the end of its design life. CJA Electrical handles homeowner EICRs across Dover and the surrounding Dover villages.
A private homeowner EICR isn’t legally required in the same way a landlord EICR is, but the IET recommends one every ten years on owner-occupied property — sooner if there’s been a major renovation, water ingress, or the consumer unit has reached the end of its design life. CJA Electrical handles homeowner EICRs across Dover and the surrounding Dover villages.
What an EICR involves for Homeowner
The technical inspection covers the consumer unit, every accessible accessory, the supply route and main earth, then circuit-level testing for continuity, insulation resistance, polarity, earth fault loop impedance, and RCD operation. All to BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 — the current UK wiring regulations. Findings get coded — C1 (danger), C2 (potentially dangerous), C3 (recommend improvement), or FI (further investigation). A satisfactory homeowner EICR has no C1, C2, or FI observations.
When you need this in Dover
The IET recommends ten-yearly EICRs on owner-occupied property as a baseline. Specific triggers that argue for an earlier inspection: - You’ve just bought the property and want to verify what the survey flagged - Major renovation work has just completed (extension, kitchen, bathroom) - Water ingress (roof leak, burst pipe) near electrical fittings - Selling the property and wanting a clean certificate in the contract pack - The consumer unit is visibly old (rewireable fuses, no RCDs) - Insurance renewal where the insurer has asked for a current EICR - A circuit that’s been tripping repeatedly without an obvious appliance fault

What the report contains
The EICR PDF you receive contains: the EICR form (overall pass-fail, observation codes against any findings, inspector qualifications, property address); the schedule of inspection (what was checked, what couldn’t be); and the schedule of test results (per-circuit numbers for continuity, insulation resistance, polarity, earth fault loop, and RCD operation). File it alongside your other property documents and pull it out when the insurer asks, the surveyor visits, or you’re thinking about selling.
Why book CJA Electrical for your Dover EICR
The pitch for a homeowner EICR: ten years working on Dover domestic property, including a fair share of period housing in Dover where the inspection is more nuanced than ticking off a checklist. Same-week appointment, written report inside 48 hours, remedials quoted clearly. Fully insured (£1m public and product liability).

How the inspection runs
Booking flow: Phone or WhatsApp triage — what kind of property, when last inspected, any known issues. Quote out the same day. Booked in around your schedule. Inspection visit. Report inside 48 hours. Remedials, if any, quoted with the report and free to instruct or decline. From first call to certificate in your inbox is usually under a week.
What affects the price
Pricing is per property and quoted up front. The variables: how many circuits, consumer unit type and age, accessibility of the meter cupboard and consumer unit, and the overall age of the wiring. Get in touch with the address and the fixed quote comes back the same day.
FAQs
Do I need an EICR before having work done in my house?
Not strictly required, but useful. A pre-work EICR documents what’s there before any new circuits or alterations are added — useful evidence of the starting condition if anything goes wrong later. For larger renovations (kitchens, extensions, anything notifiable under Building Regs) it’s particularly worth doing because it gives the installing electrician a clean baseline.
Will my EICR transfer to a buyer if I sell the property?
Yes — a vendor-commissioned EICR can be supplied through the conveyancing process and will normally be accepted by the buyer’s solicitor as evidence of electrical condition. There’s no formal transfer step; the certificate names the property and is dated, and that’s what matters. For most Dover property a satisfactory EICR is one of the most useful documents in the contract pack.
What if my consumer unit is really old?
Old consumer units (rewireable fuses, no RCDs, often plywood-mounted) are well past their design life and almost always come back as a C2 observation on inspection — making the EICR unsatisfactory until replaced. The good news is consumer unit replacement is a single-day job in most homes, and a fresh satisfactory EICR follows the work. Worth budgeting for if your consumer unit looks like it’s from before the late 1990s.
How often should I get an EICR on my own home in Dover?
The IET recommends ten-yearly inspections on owner-occupied homes as a baseline. Sooner is sensible if you’ve just bought the property, completed a major renovation, suffered water ingress near electrical fittings, or if the consumer unit has rewireable fuses and no RCDs (which puts it well past its design life). The decision is yours; the regulations don’t mandate a cycle for owner-occupied property.
Will my home insurer ask for an EICR?
Some insurers do, particularly on older properties or after a claim involving electrical fault. A current satisfactory EICR is normally enough to satisfy the question, and on older property it can speed up the policy renewal process. It rarely changes the premium meaningfully but it does take a question off the renewal form.
Homeowner EICR in nearby towns
- Homeowner EICR in Folkestone — Folkestone and Hythe
- Homeowner EICR in Canterbury — Canterbury
- Homeowner EICR in Ashford — Ashford
EICR for other audiences in Dover
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