Trades and Construction

We work with electricians.

Qualified, registered and good at your trade. Your website should make that clear in the first five seconds.

Surrey-based clientsBespoke every timeNo templates

76%

of electrical work enquiries begin with a local Google search

4.7

average star rating for Surrey's top-booked electricians

3 in 4

homeowners check reviews before calling a tradesperson

Electrical work is one of the trades where trust matters most. Customers are letting someone into their home or business to work on infrastructure they cannot see. Before they call you, they check reviews, they look at your credentials and they make a judgement about whether you look like someone they can rely on.

We work with electricians across Surrey, from sole traders doing domestic work to small electrical contractors running commercial jobs. The brief is usually the same: rank locally, look professional, and make it easy to get in touch.

Whether you focus on domestic rewires, commercial fit-outs, EV charge points or periodic inspection work, your site should show that clearly.

Common problems

Where electrician websites in Surrey tend to go wrong.

01

Not ranking locally for the jobs you want.

There is a difference between a domestic sparky doing sockets and an electrician doing commercial rewires or EV charge point installs. If your website does not make your specialism clear, you rank for the wrong searches and get quoted against the wrong competition.

02

NICEIC and NAPIT status not front and centre.

Customers hiring an electrician want to know you are registered, insured and able to self-certify Part P work. If they have to dig for your scheme membership you have already lost some of them. Your accreditation should be on the homepage, not the footer.

03

No way to separate domestic and commercial enquiries.

A homeowner wanting a fuse board change and a facilities manager wanting a full commercial rewire are very different customers. Mixing them on one generic page makes it harder to speak to either properly. Separate service pages mean better enquiries and clearer pricing conversations.

What you get

Web design for electricians in Surrey.

  • Website with separate domestic and commercial service sections
  • NICEIC, NAPIT and Part P registration displayed prominently
  • Dedicated pages for high-value services: rewires, EV chargers, consumer units
  • Local SEO for your operating area
  • Click-to-call and online enquiry form
  • Google review integration
  • Fast, mobile-first build
  • Brand identity if you need it

Why it matters

The electricians we work with are often very good at what they do and almost invisible online. Good reviews on Google but no way for new customers to find them. A properly built site, ranking for the right terms in the right towns, fills the diary without relying on directories or word of mouth to keep the phone ringing.

"I had five Google reviews and a website I built myself years ago. Makeproper sorted both. I now get consistent enquiries from local homeowners and have picked up two commercial clients through the site alone."

Dan Okafor, DO Electrical, Epsom · Website, 2024

FAQ

Electrician websites, answered.

The questions electrical company directors and senior electricians ask us most often, before they brief a project.

What should an electrician's website include?

A click-to-call number that stays visible, separate pages for the services that drive your work (rewires, fuse boards and consumer units, EV chargers, EICR testing, smart home, commercial), accreditations clearly displayed (NICEIC, NAPIT, Part P, ELECSA), real Google reviews surfaced on the site, indicative pricing or a 'how we price' explainer, and an emergency contact route that respects what 'emergency' actually means for an electrician.

How long does an electrician's website take to build?

Most projects launch within 3 to 5 weeks of kick-off. The slowest part is usually photography of completed jobs, particularly for commercial electricians where past work is the most persuasive content on the site.

Should we display NICEIC, NAPIT and Part P credentials?

Yes, prominently. Homeowners and commercial buyers are increasingly aware that not every 'electrician' is qualified to certify what they install. Clear accreditation logos near the contact CTA and a credentials page with your registration numbers and certificates removes a major reason customers walk away.

Can customers book through the site?

Yes. We integrate with the booking systems electrical companies actually use, including Commusoft, ServiceM8 and Joblogic, or build a clean enquiry-to-quote flow if you prefer to scope every job on a call. EV charger installs in particular convert well through structured online enquiry forms because customers are comparing several installers.

How do we rank for 'electrician [my town]'?

Service-specific local SEO is built in: dedicated pages for emergency electrician, rewire, EV charger install, fuse board upgrade and EICR test in your specific area, schema markup, Google Business Profile alignment, and on-page content that uses the language customers actually search with. Realistic timeline for meaningful movement is 2 to 4 months.

Areas we cover

We work with electricians across Surrey and the surrounding area.

GuildfordWokingEpsomCamberleyReigateFarnhamLeatherheadRedhillGodalmingDorking

More in trades and construction

Related pages.

Other industries we work in across trades and construction. Each page covers the specifics of how we approach websites for that sector.

Start a project

Tell us about your electrical business.

Tell us what you do, whether that is domestic, commercial or both, and what your current situation looks like online. We will come back with a straight answer on what we can do and what it will cost.

  • Reply within one working day
  • Free initial consultation
  • Clear quote, no hidden costs
  • No obligation to proceed

No spam. No hard sell. We will reply within one working day.

Ready to make
something proper?

Tell us about your project and we will get back to you within one working day.