Why Proper Outlet Installation Matters More Than It Seems

The number of electrical outlets built into most homes was determined by building codes that are decades old, developed for a time when the average household had a fraction of the electrical devices that today's homes contain. The result is that homeowners throughout Calhoun, GA routinely rely on extension cords and multi-outlet power strips as permanent solutions to a genuine shortage of appropriately located outlets.

Extension cords are designed for temporary use, not as permanent wiring solutions. Cords that run under rugs, through doorways, or behind furniture are subject to damage that is not always visible, and a cord with damaged insulation in a hidden location is a real fire hazard. Overloaded power strips that are daisy-chained together present similar risks. The safe, permanent solution is to add properly installed outlets in the locations where you actually need them, connected to appropriately sized circuits by licensed electricians.

Code Requirement Reminder

The National Electrical Code requires that no point along any wall in a habitable room should be more than six feet from an outlet, measured horizontally. Many older homes in Calhoun, GA do not meet this requirement. If you find yourself relying on extension cords to reach devices in specific areas of a room, additional outlets in those locations are both a practical and a code-compliance improvement.

Outlet Services We Provide

Our electricians install every type of residential outlet to the appropriate code standards for each location in your home.

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Standard Outlet Addition

Installation of new 15-amp or 20-amp duplex outlets in any location in the home, connected to existing or new circuits as appropriate for the intended load.

Dedicated Circuit Outlets

Installation of outlets on dedicated circuits for high-demand appliances such as refrigerators, microwaves, washing machines, and home office equipment that should not share a circuit with other devices.

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USB and Smart Outlets

Installation of outlets with integrated USB charging ports and smart outlet receptacles that allow device control via apps or voice assistants, replacing standard outlets in locations where these are beneficial.

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Outlet Replacement and Repair

Replacement of outlets that are cracked, discolored, no longer hold plugs firmly, have internal burning damage, or are simply old ungrounded two-prong units that should be replaced with modern three-prong grounded receptacles.

Everything Included in Our Outlet Installation Service

A properly installed outlet involves more than running a wire to a new location. Every installation we perform meets all applicable requirements for the specific outlet type and location.

  • Assessment of the intended circuit load and whether an existing circuit can accommodate the new outlet
  • Installation of a new dedicated circuit where the existing circuit cannot support additional load
  • Correct outlet type for each location including GFCI where required by code
  • Properly sized electrical box installed flush with the wall surface
  • Wiring run cleanly and protected appropriately through walls, ceilings, and floors
  • Correct grounding verified at every new outlet installation
  • All connections tested with outlet tester before job completion
  • All wall penetrations patched and finished appropriately

Our Step-by-Step Service Process

1

Location Assessment and Circuit Evaluation

We evaluate where you want the new outlet, what it will be used for, and whether an existing circuit can safely accommodate it. For high-demand applications, we recommend a dedicated circuit.

2

Routing Plan

We determine the optimal routing path for the new wiring, considering wall construction, insulation, and the path from the nearest suitable circuit or the panel. We discuss any wall access required with you before proceeding.

3

Wiring and Box Installation

We run the new wiring, install the electrical box at the outlet location, and make all connections at the outlet and at the circuit source. All wiring is run in a manner that protects it from damage.

4

Outlet Installation and Grounding Verification

The correct outlet type for the location is installed, and grounding is tested to confirm a proper ground path exists. GFCI outlets are installed where required by code for the specific location.

5

Testing and Completion

Every new outlet is tested with an outlet tester to verify correct wiring polarity and grounding before the job is complete. Wall surfaces disturbed during wiring are patched and left in clean condition.

Frequently Asked Questions

The number of additional outlets that can be safely added to an existing circuit depends on the circuit's amperage rating, the total load that is currently on it, and the anticipated load of the devices that will use the new outlets. As a practical guideline for planning purposes, a 15-amp circuit can safely serve a total of around 1,440 watts of load at 80 percent of its rated capacity, and a 20-amp circuit can serve around 1,920 watts at the same ratio. If an existing circuit is already serving a full complement of outlets and is regularly loaded close to its capacity, adding more outlets to it creates overload risk and a dedicated circuit for the new location is the appropriate solution. For outlets intended for high-demand appliances, a dedicated circuit is always the recommended approach regardless of what is currently on nearby circuits. We assess the existing circuit load as part of every outlet installation to make this determination correctly.
In many cases, yes. The extent of wall opening required depends on the specific location, the construction of the walls, and the routing path available for the new wiring. In homes with accessible attics or basements, wiring can often be routed through those spaces and dropped or fished down to the new outlet location with only a single opening at the outlet box location. In homes without accessible above or below spaces, wiring may need to be routed through the wall horizontally, which in some cases requires additional access points. Surface-mounted raceway systems are also an option in some situations, running wiring in a protective channel on the surface of the wall rather than inside it, which eliminates the need for any wall opening at all. We assess each installation situation individually and use the approach that minimizes disruption while meeting all code requirements.
The difference between 15-amp and 20-amp outlets lies in how much current they can safely carry and the circuit they must be connected to. A 15-amp outlet is connected to a 15-amp circuit breaker and is appropriate for general-purpose use in living spaces, bedrooms, and hallways where the connected devices are typical electronics, lamps, and small appliances. A 20-amp outlet has a specific receptacle slot shape that accepts both standard plugs and 20-amp plugs, and must be connected to a 20-amp circuit breaker with 12-gauge wire rather than the 14-gauge wire used for 15-amp circuits. 20-amp outlets are required in kitchens, bathrooms, garages, and laundry areas by current code, and are appropriate wherever high-demand appliances will be connected. You cannot safely install a 20-amp outlet on a 15-amp circuit. Our electricians always ensure that the outlet type, breaker rating, and wire gauge are matched correctly for the specific installation.