How to Choose the Best Electrical Company in Egypt? 7 Key Criteria
Choosing an electrical company isn't just about price comparison — it's a decision that affects your family's safety for years. Many apartment owners discover after handover that the cheap installation turned into a nightmare of repairs. This guide gives you 7 clear criteria to choose right the first time.
Quick Answer
A practical guide for choosing a reliable electrical company in Egypt — 7 criteria to verify before contracting, red flags to avoid, and questions to ask any electrician before starting work.
7 Criteria for Choosing a Reliable Electrical Company
License and registration — Confirm the company is registered and licensed. The supervising engineer must be a member of the Engineers Syndicate. Legal documentation means you're dealing with an accountable entity.
Work portfolio and experience — Ask to see similar previous projects (apartments, villas, commercial). A professional company has before/after photos and previous client contacts you can reference.
Drawn electrical plan — Any professional company provides a drawn electrical plan before starting. The plan specifies each circuit route and wire size. No plan = random execution that will be difficult to fix later.
Material specifications — Ask specifically: what cable brand? What breaker type? What wire cross-section? A confident company answers clearly and provides material invoices. An unreliable one avoids these questions.
Work warranty — Request a written warranty of at least one year on the execution. A company that refuses a written warranty is confident problems will appear — and doesn't want to take responsibility.
Technical report — A professional company provides a technical report after completion including: insulation resistance test results, earthing resistance, and breaker tests. This report is your legal and technical guarantee.
Price vs. value — A very low price always has a reason: cheap wire, undersized cross-sections, shortcut on circuits. Compare three company quotes. The cheapest is not the best; the most transparent about details is the most trustworthy.
Red Flags — Avoid This Electrician
Gives verbal price without site inspection or details
Doesn't provide a drawn electrical plan
Brings materials without specifying specs or invoices
Finishes too quickly without running tests
Refuses written warranty or technical report
Doesn't know the difference between MCB and RCCB
FAQ
What are the red flags that indicate an unreliable electrician?
Avoid those who: give a price without site inspection, refuse a written warranty, don't provide an electrical plan, bring materials without specifying their specs, and finish work suspiciously quickly without testing.
Must the executor be an engineer, or is a technician sufficient?
For large projects (apartments, villas): an electrical engineer must supervise execution and provide the technical report. A technician alone is sufficient for small work like replacing an outlet or breaker, not for full installation.
Can companies be compared by price alone?
No. The lowest-priced quote may be reducing wire sizes (e.g., 2.5 instead of 4mm² for AC) or reducing the number of breakers. The price difference between quotes must be compared by details, not just the total figure.
How do I verify a company's registration?
Ask for their commercial registration number or the supervising engineer's Engineers Syndicate membership card. A registered company doesn't refuse to provide this information.
Do I need to be present throughout the entire installation?
Full presence isn't necessary, but visits at key stages are recommended: start of conduit installation, wire pulling, and panel assembly. Visits show your engagement and reduce the likelihood of shortcuts.
