Electrician list. Generated from a verified database. Not the same recycled CSV.

Residential, commercial, industrial, EV-charger installers, low-voltage specialists — every record tied to a live Google Maps presence.

Electricians in CaliforniaCommercial electrical contractors by zipEV-charger installers by state

electricians (Maps-verified)

66k

66,125 records

With phone

96%

63,349 records

With website

48%

31,783 records

Decision-maker layer

Limited

Coverage thinner — see notes below

What a row looks like.

Five real records, pulled live from the database when this page rendered. Business name, category, location, phone, and website are shown as-is. Owner names and decision-maker emails are gated — they unlock after signup, on this list and every other one you generate.

BusinessCategoryLocationPhoneWebsiteDecision-maker
HUGHES ELECTRIC SERVICES LLCElectrician32726(352) 483-4848hugheselectricservice.comSignup required
Perry Novak Electric Inc.Electrician52101(563) 382-2179perrynovakelectric.comSignup required
Tamm ElectricElectrician56310(320) 356-7449tammelectric.comSignup required
Bay Electrical ContractingElectrician10532(914) 214-8884bayelectricalcontracting.comSignup required
Pat Myers Electric LLCElectrician32179(352) 816-4221patmyerselectric.comSignup required

Real records pulled live from the database. Owner names and decision-maker emails are gated behind signup — start the free trial to unlock them on this list and the rest.

The buyer profile we see most often.

Electrician lists get bought by trade-management software, electrical-supply distributors, utility programs and EV-charger installer networks, fleet-leasing companies, low-voltage and security-system OEMs, and lead-aggregation platforms looking to recruit licensed pros. The structural problem with this market is identical to plumbers: a small number of growing multi-location operations are mixed in with a long tail of one-person shops, and it's the growing companies you actually want to talk to. Static lists treat both as the same row. A Maps-anchored database at least lets you slice by Maps signal — multi-location, claimed listings, websites in active use — to push the active operators to the top. The EV-charger-installer wave has reshaped this vertical noticeably in the last few years; OEM and utility-program reps recruiting installers are increasingly the largest single buyer cohort, and they care most about which electricians are growing and licensed for the right voltage class — neither of which is a structured field, but both of which correlate with the Maps and website signals we surface.

And what isn't.

Electrician records skew the same way plumbers do: lots of small residential-and-light-commercial shops, a smaller universe of larger commercial and industrial contractors. The Maps category is decent at separating residential from commercial but not perfect — many electricians serve both and the listing reflects whatever the business owner picked. Phone is universal; website coverage is strong but not 100 percent. EV-charger installers and low-voltage specialists each have their own categories where the business owner self-classified that way; that means some EV-installer revenue lives under generic 'electrician' rather than the EV-specific tag.

You've probably seen the offers.

The same 'electrician database' that floats around the stale-CSV economy gets sold by half a dozen sites for $99 to $499, with identical contents. Our data isn't perfect — but the freshness floor is real, and your $399 a month buys generation, not a one-time stale snapshot.

We're not pretending this database is perfect. The hub page shows the live counts across every vertical, including this one. Coverage and decision-maker density vary. The trial is the right way to spot-check whether your specific ICP is well served.

Three signals. One row.

Maps-anchored

Every record begins as a real Google Maps business. If a listing disappears, the row drops on the next refresh.

Re-verified per run

Each generated list re-checks against Maps before shipping. Closed shops, sold practices, merged operators get screened.

Sheet out

Your search → a Google Sheet. Re-run any time. No CSV downloads to organize, no zip files in folders named v3-final.

Generate your first electrician list in five minutes.

1,000 lookups, free, no credit card. If the data doesn't beat the electrician list you'd otherwise pay for, the trial cost you nothing.

While you're here.

See all 13 verticals on the hub →

About the electrician list.

Do you cover EV-charger installer networks?

Where they have their own Maps listing as electricians or EV-charging-station-installers, yes. Network membership itself is not a structured field.

Can I filter by residential vs commercial?

Indirectly — 'commercial electrician' surfaces as its own category for some records. For broader segmentation, plan a second pass on the output.

Is this actually a list, or is it a tool that generates lists?

Both. The list is generated live from a Maps-verified database, every time you run a search. Think of it as a list that updates itself — you get the same outcome (a list of businesses) without the underlying file going stale between when it was scraped and when you use it.

What happens at the end of the free trial?

Nothing automatic. The 1,000 lookups are yours, no credit card, no auto-convert. If you want to keep generating lists, you upgrade. If not, you don't. We'd rather not bait-and-switch you onto a subscription you won't use.