Straight answers to the electrical questions Northern Virginia homeowners ask most — permits, safety, costs, and upgrades.
These are the questions our licensed electricians answer most often, from permit rules to panel capacity. Each answer is written to give you a clear, direct response you can act on — and links to deeper guides when you want more.
Looking for the bigger picture? Explore our Browse all electrical services, or read the authoritative reference from ESFI: home electrical safety FAQs.
In Virginia, new circuits, panel and service upgrades, and most permitted work must be performed by a licensed electrician. Simple tasks like swapping a light fixture can be DIY, but anything inside the panel should be professional.
A breaker that trips repeatedly is usually protecting you from an overloaded circuit, a short, or a ground fault. If resetting it does not hold, stop and call an electrician — the breaker is doing its job.
Knob-and-tube, aluminum branch wiring, two-prong outlets, and a fuse box are all signs of outdated wiring. A safety inspection confirms whether an update is needed.
20 articles in this category

Electrical inspections verify code compliance. Learn what inspectors look for and how to prepare.

Electrical codes ensure safety and are updated regularly. Learn key requirements for residential electrical work.

Older homes often have outdated wiring. Learn about upgrade options from targeted improvements to complete rewiring.

Grounding provides a safe path for electricity in faults. Learn why proper grounding is essential for safety.

Surge protectors shield electronics from voltage spikes. Learn how they work and which type you need.

A small spark when plugging in is often normal, but some sparks indicate problems. Learn the difference.

Dedicated circuits power single appliances for safety and performance. Learn when they are required.

Choosing the right electrician matters for safety and quality. Learn what credentials and qualities to look for.

High electric bills often have fixable causes. Learn how to identify energy wasters and reduce consumption.

Understanding voltage helps you know what your appliances need. Learn when each voltage is used.

Virginia has specific laws about homeowner electrical work. Learn what you can and cannot do yourself.

Regular electrical inspections catch problems before they become dangerous. Learn the recommended schedule.

Electrical fires cause billions in damage annually. Learn the causes and how to protect your home.

Old or damaged wiring is a leading cause of house fires. Learn the warning signs that indicate wiring problems.

Dead outlets have many causes from tripped breakers to wiring issues. Learn how to diagnose and when to call for help.

Load calculations determine if your electrical system can handle your power needs. Learn how electricians assess capacity.

Most electrical work in Virginia requires permits. Learn what needs permits and why they matter.

Electrical panels typically last 25-40 years, but many factors affect lifespan. Learn when replacement is needed.

A tripping breaker is your electrical system protecting you, but frequent trips indicate a problem. Learn the common causes and fixes.

Flickering lights can indicate simple issues or serious problems. Learn what causes flickering and when to call an electrician.
Find more helpful articles in our other categories.
EV charging covers the Level 2 home chargers and circuits that recharge an electric vehicle from your own garage or driveway. These guides walk Northern Virginia drivers through charger selection, the dedicated 240-volt circuit and panel capacity a home charger needs, permitting, and the install costs to expect. A typical Level 2 setup adds roughly 25 to 40 miles of range per hour of charging.
A panel upgrade replaces an undersized or outdated electrical panel with a modern service that safely powers today's larger loads. These homeowner guides explain when an upgrade is required, how to move from 100-amp to 200-amp service, the warning signs of failing or recalled panels, and what permitting and inspection involve. Most Northern Virginia 200-amp upgrades land between $2,500 and $6,500 depending on amperage and panel location.
Electrical home safety is the set of practices and devices that prevent shock, fire, and arc-fault hazards in a house. These guides cover GFCI and AFCI protection, smoke and carbon-monoxide detectors, overloaded circuits, aluminum wiring, and the inspections that catch problems early. Faulty wiring contributes to an estimated 45,000 home fires in the U.S. each year, which is why proactive checks matter.
Smart home technology connects lighting, outlets, thermostats, and security to app or voice control through reliable, code-compliant wiring. These articles explain smart switches and dimmers, whole-home automation hubs, structured low-voltage cabling, and the electrical groundwork a dependable smart home needs. Done right, a connected home can trim lighting and HVAC energy use by 10 to 15 percent.
Commercial electrical work covers the power systems, lighting, and code compliance that keep offices, retail spaces, restaurants, and multi-unit buildings running. These articles address three-phase service, panel and subpanel design, dedicated circuits for commercial equipment, emergency and exit lighting, and the permitting and NEC inspections that commercial properties must pass. Most commercial projects in Northern Virginia must meet the National Electrical Code on a roughly three-year update cycle, so staying current protects both safety and your certificate of occupancy.
Electrical energy efficiency is the practice of cutting wasted power through better lighting, smarter controls, and well-sized circuits. These guides cover LED retrofits, dimmers and occupancy sensors, energy monitoring, and load management that lowers your bill without sacrificing comfort. Switching from incandescent to LED lighting alone can reduce that lighting load by up to 75 percent.
Home backup power comes in two practical forms: a portable generator connected safely through a transfer switch, interlock kit, or inlet box, and a battery power station that stores electricity for silent, fuel-free, indoor-safe backup. These guides explain backfeed safety and carbon-monoxide precautions for portable generators, how battery stations from EcoFlow, Bluetti, and Anker SOLIX are sized in kWh and watts, and the electrical permitting an install requires. A transfer switch or interlock is required to connect a generator to your home safely and to code.
Lighting design pairs the right fixtures, layers, and controls to make a space both functional and inviting. These articles cover interior and exterior lighting, recessed and accent fixtures, landscape and security lighting, dimming systems, and energy-efficient LED upgrades. A well-planned layout typically blends three layers of light, ambient, task, and accent, to balance comfort and utility.
Seasonal electrical care is the year-round maintenance that keeps a home's wiring, outlets, and outdoor circuits safe through changing weather. These guides cover holiday lighting loads, storm and outage preparation, surge protection, and warm- and cold-weather inspections tuned to the Mid-Atlantic climate. A few targeted seasonal checks each year head off the outages and hazards that peak during DMV summer storms and winter cold snaps.
Local services are the city- and neighborhood-specific electrical guides for homeowners across Northern Virginia and the greater DMV. These articles cover permitting and inspection rules by jurisdiction, common wiring issues in older local housing stock, and what to expect from a licensed electrician in your community. AJ Long Electric serves more than two dozen cities and towns across Northern Virginia, Maryland, and Washington, D.C.
Electrical cost and pricing guides explain what common projects actually cost and the factors that move the final number. These articles break down pricing for panel upgrades, EV chargers, rewiring, lighting, and service calls, plus how labor, materials, permits, and home age affect a quote. As a benchmark, licensed electrical labor in the Northern Virginia and DMV market typically runs between $90 and $150 per hour.
Comparison guides weigh competing electrical products and approaches side by side so you can choose with confidence. These articles contrast options like 100- versus 200-amp service, hardwired versus plug-in EV chargers, portable generators versus battery power stations, and LED versus traditional lighting, with the trade-offs in cost, safety, and performance laid out plainly. Each comparison names the scenario where one option clearly wins so the decision is straightforward.
Ready to move from reading to results? Our licensed Northern Virginia electricians handle the work covered in these guides — permitted, inspected, and warrantied.
Our licensed electricians are ready to help with any electrical project in Northern Virginia.