New outlets and dedicated circuits
Add convenient receptacles or properly sized circuits for appliances, workshops, home offices, exercise equipment, and other higher-demand uses.

Electrical Improvements
Add the power, devices, and controls your home needs with a planned installation that considers load, routing, protection, permits, and the finished appearance.
Service Overview
A good installation begins before a cable is pulled or a box is opened. We review what you want to power, where equipment will be located, how the new load fits the existing electrical system, and what access is available. That planning helps avoid overloaded circuits, awkward device placement, unnecessary wall openings, and change orders later in the project.
Lighthouse Restoration Group installs residential electrical components for everyday upgrades, renovations, appliance changes, and new equipment. Depending on the scope, the work may require a dedicated circuit, GFCI or AFCI protection, panel capacity review, permits, or coordination with another trade. We explain those requirements clearly and keep the electrical work focused on safety, serviceability, and a clean finished result.
What We Do
The final scope depends on the electrical condition, access, equipment, permit requirements, and the approved project plan.
Add convenient receptacles or properly sized circuits for appliances, workshops, home offices, exercise equipment, and other higher-demand uses.
We install electrical supplies and disconnecting means for ranges, dryers, HVAC equipment, pumps, heaters, and other permanently connected residential equipment.
Install owner-selected fixtures and fans with suitable boxes, controls, support, grounding, and circuit protection rather than relying on the old mounting setup.
Renovation wiring can include countertop receptacles, appliance circuits, ventilation, lighting, and required GFCI or AFCI protection.
Weather-resistant receptacles, exterior lighting, garage circuits, and equipment feeds are installed with suitable boxes, covers, wiring methods, and protection.
We can replace compatible switches, dimmers, timers, occupancy controls, and connected devices while confirming the wiring supports the selected product.
Homeowner Guidance
The right design protects the home now and keeps future service straightforward.
New equipment should not be added to a convenient circuit without confirming conductor size, breaker rating, and existing load.
Device location and circuit use determine when GFCI, AFCI, weather-resistant, or other protective measures are required.
Reviewing walls, basements, attics, cabinets, and finishes helps choose a practical cable route with less disruption.
Larger additions may require load calculations or panel work before the new equipment can be connected responsibly.
We identify electrical prerequisites and coordination points early when carpenters, HVAC contractors, appliance installers, or inspectors are involved.
Our Process
The details vary by project, but the communication should remain straightforward.
We confirm the equipment, desired location, available access, existing electrical capacity, and any finish or scheduling constraints.
The electrician defines the circuit, materials, routing, protection, permit needs, and coordination required for the approved scope.
We complete the installation, verify operation and protection, label new circuits when applicable, and review the finished work.
Common Questions
These answers provide general guidance. The correct electrical scope depends on the conditions in your home.
Many fixed or high-demand appliances require a dedicated circuit, while others may share a circuit under specific conditions. The equipment rating, manufacturer instructions, existing load, and applicable code requirements determine the correct approach.
Often, yes. Basements, attics, closets, cabinets, and existing device locations may provide useful routes. Some openings can still be necessary, especially in finished areas, but planning usually reduces disruption.
Permit responsibility depends on the municipality and project. When a permit is required for our scope, we explain the process and how inspections affect scheduling before work starts.
Rough electrical work usually needs to be coordinated before walls, cabinets, tile, or other finishes close access. Final devices and fixtures are typically installed later. We can coordinate the electrical sequence with your contractor or project schedule.
Related Services
Thoughtful indoor and outdoor lighting installation, upgrades, controls, and repair.
Explore service→Panel and breakers maintenance.
Explore service→Certified ICC installer.
Explore service→Whether the project is one new outlet or electrical work throughout a renovation, the installation should fit the load, the space, and the way you will use it. Share your plans through the Service Request page and we will help define the safest practical next step.
Ready When You Are