Electrics & Plumbing7 min read

Full House Rewiring Costs UK 2026: What You Need to Know

A 3-bed house rewire costs £3,500–£5,500 in the UK. Here's what's involved, how long it takes, and how to find a Part P electrician.

Updated 19 April 2026

How much does it cost to rewire a house in the UK?

Full house rewiring costs in the UK:

Property sizeTypical cost
1-bedroom flat£1,500–£3,000
2-bedroom house£2,500–£4,000
3-bedroom house£3,500–£5,500
4-bedroom house£5,000–£7,000
5-bedroom house£7,000–£10,000+

These figures are for labour and materials (new cable, consumer unit, sockets, switches, light fittings) but exclude plastering and redecoration after the work is done, which typically adds £1,000–£3,000.

What does rewiring a house involve?

A full rewire means replacing all the electrical cabling in your home, the consumer unit (fuse box), and all wiring accessories (sockets, switches, light fittings). This includes:

  • New twin-and-earth (T&E) cables run through walls, floors, and ceilings
  • New consumer unit (typically a 17th or 18th Edition compliant unit with RCBOs)
  • New sockets, switches, and USB outlets
  • New lighting circuit and ceiling roses
  • Dedicated circuits for cooker, shower, EV charger (if requested)

The work is notifiable under Part P of the Building Regulations. Only a Part P registered electrician (or a building control-approved tradesperson) can legally certify the work. Always ask for an Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC) on completion.

How long does a rewire take?

  • 1–2 bedroom flat: 2–4 days
  • 3-bedroom house: 4–7 days
  • 4–5 bedroom house: 7–10 days

The most disruptive phase is "first fixing" — chasing channels into walls and running cables through floor joists. During this phase, the property is not safely habitable without careful planning around live circuits.

After first fix, a plasterer repairs the chased channels (add 1–2 days and £500–£1,500), then the electrician returns for second fix to fit faceplates, test all circuits, and issue the EIC.

When do you need to rewire a house?

Signs your home needs rewiring:

  • Age: Wiring over 25–30 years old should be tested; anything over 40 years old (rubber-insulated or aluminium wiring) is almost certainly due for replacement
  • Persistent tripping: If your fuses or breakers regularly trip, it indicates overloaded or faulty circuits
  • Scorch marks or burning smells from sockets or switches
  • Old-style round-pin sockets or round-shaped fuses in the consumer unit
  • Single-core wiring (no earth wire) — this is a serious safety hazard
  • Buying an older property: Mortgage lenders and insurers often require an EICR (Electrical Installation Condition Report) before lending

An EICR costs £150–£300 for a typical house and will tell you whether a rewire is recommended. It's a sensible first step before committing to a full rewire.

Minimising disruption during a rewire

A rewire is unavoidably disruptive — walls are chased, floorboards lifted, and the house is without power in sections. To minimise the impact:

  • Plan ahead: Move furniture away from walls before the electrician arrives. It saves time (and money) on site.
  • Combine with other work: If you're also renovating, plan the rewire first so plastering can cover the channels in one visit.
  • Stay elsewhere if possible: For families with young children, staying with relatives during the first-fix phase makes life significantly easier.
  • Keep a working circuit: Good electricians will maintain power to essential circuits (kitchen, one bathroom socket) throughout the project.
  • Get quotes for redecoration: Most electricians don't plaster or decorate. Budget for this separately.

How to find a certified electrician for rewiring

Always use a Part P registered electrician for rewiring work. Registration schemes include:

  • NICEIC (National Inspection Council for Electrical Installation Contracting)
  • NAPIT (National Association of Professional Inspectors and Testers)
  • ELECSA
  • SELECT (Scotland only)

You can verify an electrician's registration on the relevant scheme's website. Registration means they can self-certify notifiable electrical work without needing a separate building control inspection, saving time and cost.

Get at least 3 quotes before committing. Ask each electrician to quote for identical scope (number of circuits, consumer unit spec, accessories spec) so comparisons are meaningful.

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