property safety certificates london

Residential EIC

Our Service

Certifying Your New Electrical Work

Whenever you install a new circuit, change a consumer unit, or rewire a property, safety isn’t just a preference—it’s the law. An Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC) is the official document confirming that your new electrical work meets the strict safety standards of BS 7671. At Property Safety , our Part P registered electricians ensure your home improvements are safe, compliant, and fully certified.

Why Choose Safety Property?

  • Part P Registered: We are fully authorized to self-certify our work and notify Building Control on your behalf.

  • Renovation Experts: From kitchen extensions to full house rewires, we handle the testing and certification seamlessly.

  • Digital Certificates: Don’t lose your paperwork. We send secure, digital PDF certificates immediately upon completion.

Service Standards:

  • Rigorous Testing: We test insulation resistance, earth fault loop impedance, and RCD tripping times on all new work.

  • Building Control Notification: We handle the legal notification process with your local council, saving you time and fees.

  • 6-Year Warranty: Our work is often backed by an insurance-backed warranty for your peace of mind.

Legal Requirement

Under Part P of the Building Regulations, all major electrical work in a home (like a new fuse box or new circuit) must be certified. Without an EIC, your local council can force you to redo the work.

Selling Your Home

When you sell your property, solicitors will ask for the EIC for any electrical work done since 2005. Having this certificate prevents delays and price reductions during the sale process.

Safety Verification

An EIC proves that the new wiring isn't just "working"—it's safe. We verify that the cables are the right size and that the safety devices will trip instantly if a fault occurs.

Insurance Validated

If a fire is caused by new wiring that was never certified, your home insurance policy may be void. An EIC is your proof that the installation was done by a competent professional.

How We Works

Our Working Process

Property Safety has streamlined the certification process. We handle the logistics, keys, and tenants so you don’t have to.

Choose Your Service

Select a single certificate or a Property Safety Bundle online.

01.

Make Appointment

We arrange a time that works for you or your tenant.

02.

Expert Inspection

Our certified engineer carries out the safety check.

03.

Enjoy Your Service

Receive your digital certificate instantly via email.

04.

Planning a Rewire or New Fuse Box?

Our Expertise

Wiring Your Future, Safely

Installing new electrics is the most dangerous part of home renovation if done incorrectly. Safety Property engineers don’t guess—we calculate. We ensure your new electric shower, EV charger, or kitchen rewire is capable of handling the load. We issue a comprehensive EIC that acts as a lifetime guarantee of the installation’s initial safety.

Safety Compliance Rate
100%
Client Satisfaction
98%
On-Time Report Delivery
100%
Certified Engineers
90%

Pricing

Transparent Pricing for Every Property

Competitive rates tailored to your property size. Electrical safety shouldn’t break the bank.

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Studio / 1-Bed Flat

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Standard Home (1-3 Bedrooms)

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Additional Rooms

What is an EIC?

It is important not to confuse an EIC with an EICR.

  • EIC (Electrical Installation Certificate): Used for NEW work. Examples include installing a new consumer unit, adding a new circuit for a cooker, or a full house rewire. It certifies that the new installation is safe at the time it was put in.

  • EICR: Used for inspecting EXISTING electrics (like an MOT).

When is an EIC Required?

Not every electrical job needs a full EIC, but “notifiable” works definitely do. Skipping this step is a breach of Building Regulations.

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Common Questions

FAQs About Residential EICs

Homeowners often get confused between the different electrical certificates. Here are the answers to the most common questions about certifying new work.

Generally, no. An electrician should only sign an EIC for work they have designed, installed, and tested. We cannot sign off on DIY work or work done by a cowboy builder. If the work is already done, you would need an EICR (Condition Report) instead.