Toronto, Ontario
Emergency
in Toronto
Electrical emergencies in Toronto - from a sparking panel in The Junction to a complete outage in Leslieville - get a 24/7 response. We work in all Toronto neighborhoods, including older homes with knob-and-tube and aluminum wiring where emergencies carry higher risk. Licensed, permitted, same day.

180+
Emergency jobs in Toronto
WHY CHOOSE US IN TORONTO
Local Electricians Who Know Toronto
Toronto's housing ranges from 1850s Victorians in Cabbagetown to 2020s condo towers in Liberty Village. The older neighbourhoods west and east of downtown have the highest concentration of knob-and-tube wiring, ungrounded outlets, and undersized panels. Postwar suburbs in North York and Scarborough face panel capacity issues as homeowners add EV chargers and home offices.
55-Minute Average Response
We batch Toronto appointments for efficiency. Most calls are serviced same-day, with a 55-minute average response time across the city.
ESA Licensed and Insured
Every Toronto job is ESA permitted and inspected. We carry $5M liability insurance, meeting the requirements of Toronto condo boards and property managers.
47 Five-Star Google Reviews
Our 5.0 rating reflects the care we put into every job, whether it is a condo panel in Liberty Village or a full rewire in The Beaches.
Every Property Type
Victorian semis, postwar bungalows, high-rise condos, commercial storefronts. We have worked on them all and understand the unique wiring challenges each one presents.
Neighbourhoods We Serve in Toronto
180+
Jobs in Toronto
Same-Day
Response time
47
5-star reviews
5+
Years serving GTA
THE SERVICE
Emergency — What's Included
What Counts as an Electrical Emergency
Some electrical problems need same-day attention, others are genuine emergencies requiring an immediate call. Call us right now if you notice: sparks or arcing from an outlet, panel, or wire. A burning smell coming from walls, outlets, or your electrical panel. An outlet or switch that is hot to the touch. Power out in part of your home with no explanation from the utility. Flickering lights that started suddenly across multiple rooms. A breaker that trips immediately every time you reset it. Exposed wiring after construction, renovation, or storm damage. Any visible melting, scorch marks, or discolouration on outlets or panels. Do not wait on any of these. Cut power at the panel if you can do so safely and call us.
When to Call 911 Instead
If you see flames, smell smoke coming from walls or your panel, or suspect an electrical fire has started inside a wall - do not call an electrician first. Call 911 and evacuate immediately. Once the fire department clears the scene, we step in to assess the damage and restore safe power. We also recommend calling 911 if anyone has received an electrical shock and is showing any symptoms.
How We Respond to Emergency Calls
When you call (647) 872-9954 for an emergency, you reach a live person - not voicemail. We assess the situation on the call, dispatch based on urgency, and give you an honest arrival estimate. On arrival, the first priority is making your home safe: isolating the fault, restoring power where it is safe to do so, and giving you a clear picture of what happened and what the repair requires. No repair work begins without your approval and a clear price.
Common Electrical Emergencies We Handle
Partial power outages (one circuit or zone dead while others work). Complete power loss after a storm or surge. Tripped main breaker that will not reset. Sparking or arcing at outlets, switches, or the panel. Burning smell with no visible source. Hot outlets or switch plates. Electrical damage after flooding or water intrusion. Post-renovation exposed wiring. Blown fuses in older fuse boxes. Generator hookup and transfer switch emergencies.
Emergency Electrician Cost in Brampton
Emergency electrical work is priced differently than scheduled work - after-hours dispatch, urgency, and the diagnostic component are all factored in. We give you a clear price before starting any repair. For after-hours calls outside regular business hours (Mon-Fri 8AM-5PM, Sat-Sun 9AM-5PM), an after-hours rate applies. For daytime emergencies during business hours, standard rates apply with priority dispatch. We do not quote over the phone without seeing the problem - the numbers would be meaningless. What we can tell you: we do not pad emergency bills, and we explain every line item.
Emergency Service Area
We respond to electrical emergencies across Brampton, Mississauga, Caledon, Georgetown, Vaughan, Oakville, and surrounding GTA areas. Response times vary by location and current call volume. Brampton and Mississauga receive the fastest response. Call us at (647) 872-9954 to confirm availability in your area.
Recent Emergency Calls We Have Handled in the GTA
A homeowner in Brampton's Bramalea area called at 9 PM after noticing a burning smell coming from the wall behind their dryer. We arrived within two hours, traced the smell to an overloaded 30-amp circuit feeding both the dryer and a nearby outlet, and found scorching on the wire insulation inside the wall. We isolated the circuit, completed a full assessment, and scheduled a same-day repair the following morning. No fire started, but it was closer than they realized. A Mississauga homeowner near Malton called on a Saturday afternoon after a thunderstorm knocked out power to half their home. The main breaker had not tripped - only certain rooms were dark. We confirmed a service entrance issue on the utility side and walked the homeowner through contacting Alectra to dispatch a line crew. A Brampton family on a Sunday evening had their main breaker trip and refuse to reset. Every time they pushed it back, it tripped again within seconds. We arrived and found a dead short caused by a failed double-pole breaker. We replaced the breaker, verified every circuit it served, and restored full power before midnight. A Georgetown homeowner during a winter cold snap had outlets failing throughout the home. Tracing the fault led to a loose neutral connection at the panel that had been slowly degrading under heavy winter heating loads. We secured the connection and tested voltage across all circuits before leaving.
When to Call 911 vs When to Call an Emergency Electrician
This is one of the most important distinctions a homeowner can know, because the wrong call in a real electrical emergency wastes critical minutes. Call 911 immediately if you see active flames anywhere in your home, smell smoke coming from inside walls or from your electrical panel, see an electrical fire that has spread beyond the original source, or if anyone has received a shock and is showing symptoms (pain, burns, difficulty breathing, confusion). After calling 911, evacuate and do not re-enter. Do not attempt to fight an electrical fire with water. Once the fire department clears the scene, we come in to assess the damage and restore safe power. Call an emergency electrician if you have a burning smell but no visible fire, sparks or arcing at an outlet or switch, a breaker that will not stay reset, partial power loss in your home, a hot outlet or panel cover, or any visible damage to your electrical system after a storm, flooding, or renovation work. These problems need immediate attention but are not active fire emergencies requiring 911. When in doubt, call 911. It is always better to have the fire department arrive to a false alarm than to delay when fire is involved. Once the scene is clear, call us at (647) 872-9954. We are available 24/7.
TORONTO ELECTRICAL REALITIES
What Toronto Homeowners Deal With
Every city has its own electrical quirks. Here's what we see most often in Toronto.
Knob-and-Tube Wiring in Century Homes
Toronto has thousands of homes built before 1940 that still have active knob-and-tube wiring. This wiring was not designed for modern loads and degrades with age. Insurance companies are increasingly refusing to insure homes with active knob-and-tube. Removal requires careful work to avoid damaging original plaster and trim.
Condo Panel Capacity Limits
Many Toronto condos were built with 100-amp suite panels that are already near capacity. Adding an EV charger, induction cooktop, or electric dryer requires load calculations and sometimes a panel upgrade. Condo boards have their own approval processes that add time and complexity.
Underground Service Upgrades
Older Toronto homes often have overhead electrical service from Toronto Hydro. Upgrading to 200-amp service sometimes requires converting to underground feed, which involves coordination with the utility and trenching work. This adds cost and timeline but is necessary for modern electrical demands.
Unpermitted Renovation Wiring
Decades of renovations in Toronto homes have left layers of unpermitted electrical work. We frequently find circuits tapped off other circuits, undersized wire for the load, and junction boxes buried behind drywall. A proper inspection and remediation brings everything up to current code.
EV Charging in Older Neighbourhoods
Toronto homeowners with garages in older areas like The Beaches, Leslieville, and The Junction often need a panel upgrade before they can add an EV charger circuit. The 60 or 100-amp panels in these homes were not designed for the 50-amp draw of a Level 2 charger.
Aging Federal Pioneer Panels
Homes built in Toronto between 1975 and 1990 frequently have Federal Pioneer Stab-Lok panels with a documented history of breaker failure. These panels are flagged during home inspections and should be replaced proactively.
FAQ
Emergency in Toronto - Common Questions
NEARBY CITIES
Emergency in Nearby GTA Cities
We serve Toronto and the surrounding area. Same ESA-licensed team, same quality.
MORE SERVICES IN TORONTO
Other Electrical Services We Offer in Toronto
Toronto's older homes in Roncesvalles, The Junction, Leslieville, and East York are the primary source of panel upgrade work. Many still have 60-amp fuse boxes or outdated 100-amp panels. We upgrade to 200-amp breaker panels with full ESA permitting, coordinating with Toronto Hydro for service upgrades when needed.
Toronto has one of the highest concentrations of knob-and-tube wiring in Ontario. Homes in The Annex, Cabbagetown, Parkdale, and Roncesvalles were built when this wiring method was standard. We carefully remove all active knob-and-tube and install new copper wiring without unnecessary damage to original plaster and woodwork.
Pot lights are the most popular lighting upgrade in renovated Toronto homes. Whether it is a Victorian kitchen renovation in Leslieville or a basement finishing in Scarborough, slim LED pot lights transform the space. We install 12 to 20 lights per project on average.
Toronto's EV adoption is growing fast, and homeowners with garages are adding Level 2 chargers. In older neighbourhoods, this often requires a panel upgrade first. For condo residents, we work with building management to install chargers in parking garages with proper metering and load management.
Toronto homes built before 1960 often need complete rewiring. We replace outdated copper, aluminum, or knob-and-tube wiring with modern NMD90 copper, add grounding throughout, and upgrade the panel to 200 amps. This work is especially common in East York, The Danforth, and High Park.
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Emergency in Toronto - Booked Fast
$49 on-site assessment credited toward your project. ESA-licensed, fully insured. Same-day service available.