Before the home hits the market
For sellers & listing agents
A buyer’s home inspector will almost always comment on electrical items—GFCI locations, panel age, double taps, missing covers, and more. When those show up for the first time after you are under contract, they often show up as repair requests, credits, or delayed closings.
A pre-listing electrical inspection gives you a licensed, documented picture of the system before the MLS photos go live. That means you can price and market with fewer surprises, choose which items to repair on your schedule, and reduce the chance that electrical issues erode your net at the negotiation table. It does not guarantee a higher sale price—but it does help you avoid the last-minute scramble that makes listings look tired and expensive.