A professional estimate or invoice does more than list prices — it sells confidence. For electrical contractors, the quality of your estimate directly impacts whether the customer chooses you over the next company. This guide covers what to include in electrical estimates and invoices, common line items, payment terms, and templates you can use today.
What to Include in a Electrical Estimate
A complete electrical estimate should include these elements:
- Company information: Business name, license number, insurance details, phone number, email
- Customer information: Name, address, phone, email
- Scope of work: Detailed description of what you'll do — specific enough that there's no ambiguity
- Line items with pricing:
Common electrical estimate line items:
- Materials (wire, breakers, fixtures)
- Labor hours
- Permit and inspection fees
- Panel upgrade costs
- Trenching for underground runs
- Generator transfer switch
- Total price: Clearly stated, including any taxes
- Payment terms: 50% deposit, balance on completion
- Estimate validity: Typically 30 days for electrical contractors
- Warranty information: What's covered, for how long
- Acceptance signature line: Customer signature to authorize work
Estimates That Win More Jobs
Electrical Contractors that send professional, detailed estimates close 16% more jobs than those that give verbal quotes or handwritten numbers. Here's why:
- Speed matters: Send your estimate within 2-4 hours of the site visit. Same-day estimates close at nearly double the rate of next-day estimates.
- Detail builds trust: Breaking down costs into line items shows the customer exactly what they're paying for. It also makes your price harder to undercut because customers can see the value.
- Options win: Offer 2-3 tiers (good/better/best) when appropriate. This gives customers control and shifts the conversation from "should I hire you?" to "which option should I pick?"
- Follow up: The average electrical customer needs 3 follow-ups before making a decision. Don't send the estimate and wait — follow up at 24 hours, 3 days, and 7 days.
Electrical Invoice Best Practices
Once the job is done, a professional invoice ensures you get paid quickly:
- Mirror the estimate: Your invoice should match the estimate exactly (plus any approved change orders). Surprises on the invoice destroy trust.
- Include before/after photos: Attach job photos to the invoice. This reminds the customer of the value delivered and reduces payment disputes.
- Offer multiple payment methods: Credit card, bank transfer, check, financing. The easier you make it to pay, the faster you get paid.
- Send immediately: Invoice on the day of job completion. Every day you wait reduces the likelihood of prompt payment.
- Automate reminders: Set up automatic payment reminders at 7, 14, and 30 days past due.
Payment terms for electrical contractors: 50% deposit, balance on completion. For jobs over $7,500, consider progress payments tied to milestones.
Tools for Electrical Estimates and Invoices
You don't need expensive software to create professional estimates. Here are options at every price point:
- Free: Google Docs/Sheets templates, Wave, Invoice Ninja
- Mid-range ($20-50/mo): Jobber, Housecall Pro, ServiceTitan (for larger operations)
- Industry-specific: Many CRM platforms for electrical contractors include built-in estimating and invoicing
Whatever tool you use, the most important thing is speed and consistency. The electrical company that responds to an inquiry fast, shows up on time, and sends a professional estimate the same day wins the job — even if they're not the cheapest option.
And it all starts with answering the phone. If a potential customer can't reach you to schedule the estimate, none of this matters. NeverMiss ensures every call to your electrical business gets answered — so you never lose a $420+ job to voicemail.