Longwood, FL sits within the Orlando metropolitan area, where a humid subtropical climate brings hot summers, mild winters, and frequent afternoon thunderstorms. Occasional hurricane activity adds further stress to residential and commercial electrical systems throughout the region.
For property owners in Longwood, the combination of storm activity, persistent humidity, and older housing stock means electrical systems face real and ongoing demands. Licensed, code-compliant work helps ensure installations hold up to local conditions and remain ready for inspection when needed.
This directory lists electrical contractors serving Longwood to help homeowners and property owners connect with licensed local professionals. Browse listings below to compare local options.
Super Fast Electric
★ 4.9 (644 reviews)
234 W Marvin Ave #112, Longwood, FL 32750
ElectricalMain Line Electrical Contractors
★ 4.7 (33 reviews)
722 Commerce Cir, Longwood, FL 32750
ElectricalJD Electrical Contractors
★ 3.8 (13 reviews)
1045 N Ronald Reagan Blvd, Longwood, FL 32750
Hiring a electrical contractor in Longwood, FL
Hiring an electrical contractor in Longwood, FL covers everything from panel upgrades and EV charger installs to whole-home generator hookups, ceiling fan replacements, and post-storm service restoration. The directory below lists active electrical contractors so you can compare and verify before you commit.
Many older Orlando-area homes still have 100A or even 60A panels that are undersized for today's loads (EV chargers, induction ranges, multi-zone AC), and a proper electrical contractor will quote a panel upgrade with the right utility coordination rather than just adding circuits to a maxed-out box.
How to verify a electrical contractor's license in Florida
Look for license type: EC — Certified Electrical Contractor
Go to myfloridalicense.com, the official Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) portal, and use "Verify a License." Search by the contractor's business name, the qualifier's individual name, or the license number itself. Confirm the license type is "EC — Certified Electrical Contractor," the status reads "Current, Active," the expiration date is in the future, and there is no disciplinary or complaint history attached to the record.
"EC" is the statewide certification issued by the Florida Electrical Contractors' Licensing Board (a separate board from DBPR's CILB, but visible through the same myfloridalicense.com search). You may also see "ER" — registered electrical contractor, limited to specific local jurisdictions.
Why verifying matters in Florida
Florida law (§ 489.127, F.S.) makes it a third-degree felony to contract without a license on a project valued at $5,000 or more, or any size project during a declared state of emergency. Verifying licensure before you sign a contract is the single most important step you can take to protect your home and your deposit. Central Florida's hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, and unlicensed storm-chasing crews routinely move through Orange, Seminole, and Osceola counties after a major event. Confirming an active state license — and an in-state business address you can actually drive to — keeps you out of that risk pool. Electrical work hidden inside walls won't reveal a bad installation until something fails — which is exactly why Florida requires permits, inspections, and a state license.
Questions to ask before you hire
- Are you pulling the electrical permit and scheduling the inspection in your license?
- If this involves the panel or service, will you coordinate the utility disconnect/reconnect with Duke, OUC, or KUA?
- Will the work bring affected circuits up to current National Electrical Code (NEC) and Florida amendments, including AFCI/GFCI where required?
- What is your warranty on parts and labor, in writing?
- Is this a flat quote, or time-and-materials? If T&M, what is the cap?
Frequently asked questions
- Do I need a permit for an EV charger install?
- Yes. Every Orlando-area jurisdiction requires an electrical permit for a Level 2 (240V) EV charger circuit, and the installing contractor must be state-licensed (EC) or local-registered (ER) for your address. The permit covers wire sizing, breaker selection, and grounding — all of which affect fire safety.
- Do I need a whole-home generator or a portable will do?
- It depends on what you actually need to power and for how long. Portable generators (with an interlock kit installed by a licensed electrician) handle a few critical circuits for short outages. Permanently installed standby generators with automatic transfer switches power the whole house and start themselves — typical for medical equipment, well pumps, or extended hurricane outages.
- What's wrong with Federal Pacific or Zinsco panels?
- Both are legacy panel brands known to fail to trip under fault conditions, which is a documented fire risk. Many home inspectors will flag them and some insurers in Florida will refuse to write a policy until the panel is replaced. A licensed electrician can confirm what you have and quote a proper replacement.
- Who is the utility provider in Longwood and does that affect who I hire?
- Longwood is served by one of three utilities in the Orlando metro: Duke Energy, OUC (Orlando Utilities Commission), or KUA (Kissimmee Utility Authority). For any panel or service work, your electrician needs to coordinate the disconnect/reconnect with the right utility — experienced Longwood-area electricians already know the local process and turnaround times.