Built for
outside.
Pool pumps, hot tub hookups, landscape lighting, and outdoor outlets — all wired to code for coastal North Carolina. GFCI protection, bonding, weatherproofing, and permits included.
Pool pumps, hot tub hookups, landscape lighting, and outdoor outlets — all wired to code for coastal North Carolina. GFCI protection, bonding, weatherproofing, and permits included.
New pool builds or replacing old equipment. Pump, heater, chlorinator, and lighting — all wired, bonded, and grounded to NEC Article 680 requirements.
Every hot tub needs a dedicated 240V, 50-amp circuit and a GFCI disconnect within line of sight. Not a job for an extension cord or a shared circuit.
Deck lights, path lights, uplighting on trees, security floods — wired on dedicated circuits with timers or smart switches so you're not leaving them on all night.
Outdoor kitchen, workshop, detached garage, holiday lighting — anywhere you need power outside. All outlets GFCI-protected with in-use weatherproof covers.
Outdoor electrical in Wilmington isn't the same as outdoor electrical in Raleigh. Salt air corrodes connections, humidity accelerates wear, and hurricane-force winds test every installation. Every outdoor job gets marine-grade hardware and weatherproof enclosures rated for coastal conditions.
These aren't suggestions — they're NEC requirements. Every outdoor job is built to code.
Your yard gets walked, the panel gets checked, and maps out the circuit runs. You'll know exactly what's needed before any work starts — equipment, labor, permits, all of it.
New circuits, sub-panels, and pool/hot tub wiring require permits in New Hanover County. Permits are pulled and inspections are scheduled for you.
Trenching, conduit, wiring, GFCI protection, bonding — done in one visit for most jobs. Larger pool builds may take two days.
Every circuit tested, every GFCI tripped and verified, county inspection scheduled. You get a working outdoor setup and a clean permit record.
Yes. Most hot tubs need a dedicated 240V, 50-amp circuit with a GFCI-protected disconnect within sight of the tub but at least 5 feet from the water. That's an NEC requirement. We install the circuit, disconnect, and wiring — all permitted and inspected.
Pricing depends on distance from your panel and whether you need a sub-panel at the equipment pad. Variable-speed pumps usually need a dedicated 240V circuit. Add bonding and GFCI protection — both required by code. You get a full quote before any work starts.
Yes. NEC requires all outdoor receptacles to be GFCI-protected with weatherproof in-use covers — the kind that stay sealed while a cord is plugged in, not just flip-up covers. We install commercial-grade GFCI outlets rated for coastal conditions.
Sometimes, if the circuit has capacity. But landscape lighting, deck lights, and security floods are better on dedicated circuits with their own timers or smart switches. We check your panel and recommend the right approach based on how many fixtures you're running.
In New Hanover County, any new circuit, sub-panel, or pool/hot tub wiring requires a permit. Adding outlets to an existing circuit may not. We know which jobs need permits and pull them when required. Every permitted job gets a county inspection.