Georgetown, Ontario
Knob & Tube
in Georgetown
The heritage homes along the Credit River and throughout downtown Georgetown are the prime candidates for knob-and-tube removal. Insurance companies serving Halton Hills are tightening their stance - several local homeowners have been given 90-day ultimatums to replace legacy wiring or lose coverage. We handle the full removal and rewire with minimal disruption to plaster walls.

100+
Knob & Tube jobs in Georgetown
WHY CHOOSE US IN GEORGETOWN
Local Electricians Who Know Georgetown
Heritage homes along the Credit River and throughout downtown Georgetown often need panel upgrades and rewiring to handle modern loads. The GO station has attracted young families who want their older homes modernized with pot lights, EV chargers, and updated electrical systems. Rural properties around Glen Williams and Limehouse frequently need service upgrades from 100 to 200 amps.
Fast Response to Georgetown
40-minute average response from Brampton. We serve all of Halton Hills including Georgetown, Glen Williams, Limehouse, and Norval.
ESA Licensed for Halton Hills
Every job is ESA permitted and inspected. We handle all paperwork, notifications, and scheduling with the Mississauga ESA office so you do not have to.
5-Star Reputation
47 Google reviews and a 100% satisfaction guarantee. In a small town where everyone talks, our reputation is our most valuable asset.
Heritage Home Experience
We have worked on homes along the Credit River built in the 1890s and in brand-new Georgetown subdivisions. We know the difference between careful heritage rewiring and standard new-construction work.
Neighbourhoods We Serve in Georgetown
100+
Jobs in Georgetown
Next Day
Response time
47
5-star reviews
5+
Years serving GTA
THE SERVICE
Knob & Tube — What's Included
What Is Knob-and-Tube Wiring?
Knob-and-tube (K&T) wiring was the standard electrical wiring method in Ontario homes built before 1950. It uses ceramic knobs to support wires along joists and tubes to protect wires passing through wood framing. While revolutionary for its era, K&T wiring was designed for a time when homes had far fewer electrical demands. It has no ground wire, cannot handle modern electrical loads, and its cloth insulation degrades over decades.
Why Replacement Is Often Required
Most Ontario insurance companies now require knob-and-tube wiring to be replaced as a condition of coverage. If you are buying a home with K&T wiring, your home inspector will flag it, and your insurer may refuse coverage or charge significantly higher premiums until it is replaced. Beyond insurance, K&T wiring is a genuine safety concern: degraded insulation creates fire risk, lack of grounding creates shock risk, and the inability to handle modern loads causes overheating.
Our Replacement Process
Step 1: Complete inspection. We trace all K&T wiring throughout the home, including hidden runs in walls and ceilings. Step 2: Detailed scope and quote. We identify exactly what needs to be replaced and provide an honest assessment. Step 3: Methodical replacement. We remove the old K&T wiring and install modern NMD90 copper wiring with proper grounding. Step 4: ESA inspection and certification. Step 5: We provide all documentation your insurance company needs to update your policy.
What to Expect During the Project
Knob-and-tube replacement is one of the more involved electrical projects. Depending on your home, we may need to open sections of walls and ceilings to access the old wiring. We minimize disruption as much as possible, work room by room, and clean up daily. For a typical Brampton bungalow, the project takes 3-5 days. Two-storey homes may take 5-7 days. We coordinate with drywall contractors if patching is needed.
Recent Knob-and-Tube Replacement Projects in the GTA
A homeowner in Brampton's downtown core purchased a 1941 two-storey home and their insurer refused to bind coverage until the K&T was fully replaced. We completed a room-by-room assessment, identified three partial K&T circuits still active on the second floor and two in the basement, and replaced all of them over four days. The homeowner had their certificate of inspection in hand within a week of calling us. In Mississauga's Port Credit neighbourhood, a homeowner discovered active knob-and-tube during a renovation when their contractor opened the kitchen ceiling. The kitchen had been partially updated but original K&T still fed the back bedroom circuits. We removed the remaining active K&T, ran new NMD90 throughout, and let the renovation continue on schedule. A couple in Caledon was selling their 1948 farmhouse and needed K&T removal as a condition of the buyer's financing. We prioritized their job, completed the replacement in five days, and had the ESA certificate delivered to their real estate lawyer before the scheduled closing. A Brampton homeowner on Vodden Street had a home that a previous electrician had partially updated - some circuits were new copper, others were old K&T. The mixing of systems was creating problems with tripping breakers. We traced all circuits, separated the old from the new, replaced the remaining K&T sections, and left the panel with properly identified circuits for the first time in decades.
Why Insurance Companies in Ontario Are Rejecting Knob-and-Tube Homes
In the past few years, Ontario home insurance companies have become significantly stricter about knob-and-tube wiring. Where many insurers previously required a letter from an electrician confirming the K&T was in acceptable condition, most now require full removal as a condition of coverage - no exceptions. There are a few reasons for this shift. First, Ontario homes with K&T are now 70 to 100+ years old, and even well-preserved K&T wiring is deteriorating. The cloth insulation becomes brittle and cracks over time. Second, insurance claim data connects older wiring types to a higher incidence of electrical fires. Third, the reinsurance market - the companies that insure the insurance companies - has pushed carriers to tighten standards. What this means practically: if you are buying a home with active K&T wiring, expect your insurer to either refuse coverage, issue coverage with a short compliance window (60 to 90 days), or charge a significant premium surcharge. Some insurers will not bind coverage at all until a licensed electrician confirms the K&T has been removed. We work with several real estate lawyers and agents in Brampton and Mississauga who refer clients to us specifically for pre-sale and pre-purchase K&T assessments. If you are buying or selling a home with K&T, call (647) 872-9954 and we can usually get an assessment scheduled quickly.
GEORGETOWN ELECTRICAL REALITIES
What Georgetown Homeowners Deal With
Every city has its own electrical quirks. Here's what we see most often in Georgetown.
Heritage Wiring in the Downtown Core
Georgetown's Main Street district is full of character homes built between the 1880s and 1940s. Behind the charm, many of these homes still have knob-and-tube wiring, undersized fuse boxes, and no grounding system. Insurance companies are increasingly refusing to renew policies on homes with these legacy systems.
Rural 100-Amp Limitations Outside Town
Properties around Glen Williams, Limehouse, and Norval were wired decades ago with 100-amp service - enough for basic needs at the time. Today, between EV chargers, heat pumps, workshops, and home offices running off these rural properties, 100 amps is dangerously inadequate. Breakers trip under normal load, and there is no room in the panel for new circuits.
Outbuilding and Workshop Wiring
Many Georgetown-area properties have detached garages, workshops, or garden studios that were wired informally - sometimes by the homeowner, sometimes by a handyman decades ago. These structures need proper sub-panels, correct wire gauge for the run length, and weatherproof fixtures to meet current ESA code.
GO Commuter Modernization Demand
Young families moving to Georgetown for the GO train commute often buy older homes near the station and want them brought up to modern standards fast. They need pot lights, EV charger hookups, smart switches, and panels that can handle it all. The demand is steady and growing.
Aging Aluminum Wiring in 1960s - 1970s Homes
Georgetown South and parts of Georgetown North have a concentration of homes built with aluminum branch wiring. Aluminum connections expand and contract with heat, loosening over time and creating fire risk at outlets and switches. Proper remediation with approved connectors or full copper replacement is the solution.
FAQ
Knob & Tube in Georgetown - Common Questions
NEARBY CITIES
Knob & Tube in Nearby GTA Cities
We serve Georgetown and the surrounding area. Same ESA-licensed team, same quality.
MORE SERVICES IN GEORGETOWN
Other Electrical Services We Offer in Georgetown
Electrical emergencies in Georgetown and Halton Hills get a same-day response. Rural properties outside town limits are no problem - we cover all of Halton Hills. We handle sparking outlets, tripping breakers, storm damage, and complete power loss with a licensed electrician on site.
Georgetown has a large stock of homes from the 1950s through 1980s with 60-amp and 100-amp panels that cannot handle modern electrical loads. With EV chargers, heat pumps, and home offices now standard, upgrading to a 200-amp panel is the most common project we complete in Halton Hills. Rural properties around Glen Williams need it most urgently.
Georgetown's GO commuter population drives EV adoption. Many families charging overnight need a Level 2 charger at home instead of relying on the slow Level 1 cord that came with the car. We install the dedicated 240V, 50-amp circuit and mount the charger in the garage or on the exterior wall. The run from the panel to the garage is often short in Georgetown homes, keeping costs down.
When a Georgetown heritage home has knob-and-tube on one floor, aluminum on another, and a handful of DIY additions in the basement, a full rewire makes more sense than piecemeal fixes. We plan the project room by room to minimize disruption. Halton Hills building inspectors know us, and our work passes ESA inspection the first time.
Open-concept renovations are popular across Georgetown as homeowners knock out walls in their 1960s and 1970s bungalows. Pot lights are the go-to choice for clean, modern lighting in these newly opened spaces. We install slim LED panels that fit into the existing ceiling without bulky cans, and we can usually wire 6 to 8 lights in a single day.
READY TO BOOK?
Knob & Tube in Georgetown - Booked Fast
$49 on-site assessment credited toward your project. ESA-licensed, fully insured. Same-day service available.