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

For private homeowners in Gravesend, an EICR is the formal evidence that the fixed wiring meets BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 — the current UK wiring regulations. Worth doing every ten years on settled property, sooner where the consumer unit looks dated, where there’s been recent water damage, or where you’re thinking about selling and want a clean compliance footprint in the contract pack.

What an EICR involves for Homeowner

What’s actually inspected: the consumer unit (inside and out), every accessible socket and switch, light fittings within reach, the meter tails and main earth, and visible cable routes. What’s tested: every circuit gets dead testing (continuity, insulation resistance, polarity) and live testing (earth fault loop impedance, RCD operating times). The report is the documented outcome — observation codes against any findings, plus the schedule of test results circuit-by-circuit.

When you need this in Gravesend

Reasons Gravesend homeowners book us in: A house move where the survey flagged the electrics. A renovation that’s extended into more electrical work than originally planned. A roof leak that touched a ceiling rose or pendant. An insurance renewal that asked about a recent inspection. A consumer unit so old it has rewireable fuses and no RCDs. Or just hitting the ten-year mark on a property and wanting a fresh report on file.

Modern RCBO consumer unit after a satisfactory EICR
Modern RCBO consumer unit after a satisfactory EICR

What the report contains

The report comes back as a single PDF — the EICR form with the observation codes, the schedule of inspection, and the schedule of test results circuit-by-circuit. Standard format, plain enough to file alongside other property paperwork. Where the property fails the inspection (any C1, C2, or FI observations), the report lists each finding with its code. We’ll quote the remedial work at the same time so you can decide what to do — fix now, fix later, or leave it on the C3-only sections that don’t fail.

Why book CJA Electrical for your Gravesend EICR

What homeowners want from a domestic EICR is straightforward: an inspector who’ll explain what they’re finding, a report that’s intelligible, and a quote for any remedial work that’s clearly itemised so you can decide what to do. We do all three. City & Guilds 2391 qualified, ten years on Gravesend and Gravesham property, fully insured, fixed quote up front, payment on certificate.

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

How the inspection runs

What it looks like: Initial conversation — by phone or WhatsApp, sometimes by email. Quote confirms price and slot. Visit on the agreed day. Power off briefly on each circuit during testing — usually fifteen to thirty minutes per circuit. Report PDF arrives within 48 hours of the visit. If there are remedials, the quote arrives at the same time.

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

Does an EICR check my consumer unit?

Yes. The consumer unit is one of the first things inspected — opened up, examined for damage and signs of overheating, tested for RCD operation against the times BS 7671 requires. An aged consumer unit (rewireable fuses, no RCD protection) is usually a C2 finding on inspection and the most common driver of an unsatisfactory homeowner EICR.

How long does the inspection take?

On a typical Gravesend three-bed home, the inspection visit is a morning or an afternoon. Larger properties or those with multiple consumer units take longer. Power is off briefly on each circuit during its testing, but the rest of the property’s circuits stay live, so most homeowners can carry on with their day around the inspector.

Will an EICR find every electrical problem in my home?

It documents the visible and electrically-testable condition of the fixed wiring at the time of the inspection. It doesn’t include intrusive opening-up of walls or floors, so wiring concealed behind plaster isn’t directly inspected. Where the test results suggest something hidden needs investigation (insulation resistance suspiciously low on a circuit, for example), that gets flagged as an FI observation in the report.

Will the inspection mess up my house?

No. The inspection is non-intrusive — we open the consumer unit cover, the front-plates of accessible accessories, and look at the route of any visible wiring. Nothing is opened up behind walls or floors. The only disruption is brief power-off on each circuit during testing. Most homeowners are surprised how unobtrusive the visit is.

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.

Homeowner EICR in nearby towns

EICR for other audiences in Gravesend

Get a quote

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EICR detail (helps with the quote)

Or skip the form: Call 07598 216512 WhatsApp info@cjaelectrical.co.uk