Electrical Cost in Idaho 2026

Electrical cost in Idaho in 2026. Average prices, electrical labor rates, common project pricing, and licensing requirements. Free 2026 cost guide.

What Electrical contractors charge in Idaho

  • Average service call: $269 - $624
  • Average project size: $1,728 - $6,240 (panel upgrade, full house rewire higher)
  • Labor rate: $28/hour (median)
  • Materials markup: 40 - 75%
  • Labor as % of project: 50 - 65%

Idaho is at national average. Numbers reflect 2026 market rates for licensed electrical contractors.

Common Electrical jobs in Idaho

  • Outlet repair
  • Panel upgrade
  • Whole-house rewire
  • Lighting installation
  • EV charger install
  • Generator install

Idaho Electrical sales tax

Idaho sales tax: 6% (limited local addition). Real property labor exempt. Resort city taxes add additional local tax in Sun Valley, McCall.

Verify with the Idaho State Tax Commission.

Idaho Electrical licensing

Idaho Contractors Board (Idaho Division of Building Safety) - license required: $70 (initial) + $5K bond.

How electrical pricing actually works in Idaho

Idaho contractors price electrical work around three forces that are not the same in every state: local labor supply, material delivery costs, and the climate-driven workload pattern that determines whether a crew is busy or chasing leads. Labor in Idaho runs at the rate above for an experienced electrical professional, which is near the national average and reflects a balanced supply of trained contractors against the demand for electrical work. Urban metros typically run 10 to 25 percent higher than rural counties. The contractor who fails to adjust their bid by metro area underbids urban jobs and overbids rural ones.

Material costs in Idaho are shaped by distance from the nearest port or major distribution hub. Material costs vary by metro market and the contractor who has worked in Idaho for years knows where the breakpoints are.

The contractor who has worked in Idaho for five years has internalized these factors and prices accordingly. The out-of-state contractor or new homeowner often misses one or more of them and ends up with a quote that does not reflect the real cost of doing the work properly. The way to get an accurate price is to talk to three different electrical professionals who all work regularly in your specific area of Idaho, not in a different state and not in a different metro.

What separates the cheap quote from the right quote in Idaho

Three quotes for the same electrical job in Idaho can vary by 40 percent or more. The lowest is not always the worst and the highest is not always the best. Understanding the legitimate reasons quotes vary is how a homeowner picks the right contractor without overpaying and how a contractor wins jobs without being undercut.

  • Labor classification. A union-shop electrical crew bids higher than a non-union crew because the labor rate is mandated by collective bargaining. In Idaho this can mean 20 to 35 percent difference on labor alone. Both produce competent work; the difference is the employer cost structure.
  • Material spec. Builder-grade materials cost 30 to 60 percent less than premium-grade. A bid that uses 30-year shingles versus 50-year, contractor-grade plumbing fixtures versus mid-tier, or pine trim versus paint-grade hardwood is not the same scope, and the homeowner who compares only the bottom line is comparing different jobs.
  • Project management overhead. A larger electrical contractor carries dispatch, scheduling, sales, and back-office overhead that the solo operator does not. The larger operation produces predictable delivery and warranty support; the solo operator produces lower prices but variable scheduling.
  • Risk premium. The contractor who underbids the first job and absorbs the loss either makes it up on change orders or never finishes. The contractor who builds a 10 to 15 percent contingency into the bid is the one who delivers on time without scope disputes.

Idaho electrical seasonal pricing and timing

Idaho electrical work runs year-round with seasonal patterns driven by holiday slowdowns and customer demand cycles. December through January typically sees lower demand and homeowners can negotiate harder; April through June sees the highest demand and tightest scheduling.

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