Updated May 2026 · Local pricing for the Seattle-Tacoma metro area
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Prices estimated using the NailThePrice Local Cost Model™ — national averages adjusted for Kirkland's labor rates, cost of living, and material pricing.
The cost to rewire a house in Kirkland ranges from $4,480 to $25,620, with most homeowners paying around $10,890. Your actual cost depends on several factors specific to your home and the Seattle-Tacoma market.
Larger homes need more wire, more circuits, and more labor hours — cost scales roughly proportionally with square footage.
Modern code requires dedicated circuits for kitchens, bathrooms, laundry, and outdoor areas, so a full rewire typically installs 20–40+ circuits.
Open walls (during a remodel) cut labor costs dramatically versus fishing wire through finished walls, which may require temporary drywall removal.
Pre-1960s homes often have knob-and-tube or ungrounded wiring that requires complete replacement and may reveal other code issues.
Bringing a home up to current NEC code often requires AFCI/GFCI breakers, grounding, and additional circuits beyond just replacing old wire.
The Pacific Northwest has moderate to high labor costs. Rain affects exterior scheduling October through April. Green building practices are common and many contractors specialize in energy-efficient work.
Most whole-home rewires happen because the house slowly outgrew the wiring, not because the lights stopped working. The problem usually shows up when homeowners start stacking modern electrical loads onto a system built for window AC units, one bathroom outlet, and maybe a microwave if you were lucky.
I see this constantly in 1940s through 1970s homes. Two-prong outlets, ungrounded branch circuits, overloaded junction boxes, cloth wiring buried behind insulation, and panels that have been "made to work" for 40 years with tandem breakers and DIY additions. A lot of these homes technically still have power everywhere. That doesn't mean the system is safe or remotely designed for modern use.
The hidden cost driver in rewiring isn't usually the wire itself. Copper is expensive, but labor is what moves the number. Finished plaster walls, tight attic access, detached garages, and homeowners wanting minimal drywall damage are what turn a straightforward rewire into a major project. Older homes are especially tricky because so many have finished basements, additions, or remodels added decades after the original construction. Sometimes the hardest part of the job is figuring out what's original wiring and what some homeowner added in 1987 after watching half a VHS tutorial.
One thing I wish homeowners understood: rewiring is not just "pulling new wire." Once you touch enough of the system, current code comes into play. AFCI protection, bathroom and kitchen GFCI requirements, smoke detector interconnection, grounding upgrades, proper bonding — all the stuff old houses never had. Inspectors are a lot stricter about this now than they were even ten years ago.
I also see a lot of bad estimates in this category. If the quote doesn't mention how many circuits are being added, whether the service panel is included, or what patching responsibility looks like afterward, the number is incomplete. "Whole house rewire as needed" is not a real scope of work.
And if it's my house, I'm rewiring the entire thing once instead of chasing problems room-by-room over the next decade. Piecemeal rewires almost always cost more long-term because every future electrician has to work around old circuits mixed with new ones. Clean slate is cleaner, safer, and honestly cheaper by the time most homeowners finally finish the process.
Budget $280–$1260 for permits and inspections. Your contractor typically handles the permit process, but confirm this upfront.
Hiring a pro? Make sure they're properly licensed — see electrician licensing in Washington.
Mild climates offer the most flexible scheduling for electrical work. Year-round availability typically means more competitive pricing and faster turnaround times.
This project requires a licensed professional in Kirkland. Attempting whole house rewiring without proper licensing can void insurance and create serious safety hazards.
Compare licensed, insured contractors serving Seattle-Tacoma.
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The average cost to rewire a house in Kirkland ranges from $4,480 to $25,620, with most homeowners paying around $10,890. This estimate includes both labor ($7,620) and materials ($3,270). Costs in Kirkland are higher than the national average due to local cost of living and labor market conditions. Get multiple quotes from licensed Kirkland contractors to lock in the best price.
Yes, Kirkland typically requires a permit for whole house rewiring. Budget $280–$1260 for permit fees and expect 1–2 weeks for approval. Your contractor typically handles the permit application. Working without a required permit can void warranties and create problems when selling your home.
Most whole house rewiring projects in Kirkland take 5–14 days to complete. The timeline depends on project scope, contractor availability in the Seattle-Tacoma metro area, and seasonal demand. Scheduling during Kirkland's off-peak season (typically winter months) can reduce wait times and may lower costs.
Warning signs include frequent breaker trips, flickering lights, two-prong (ungrounded) outlets, discolored outlets, a burning smell, or a home older than 40 years that hasn't been updated. An electrician can inspect for $100–$300.
Usually yes, though you'll have periods without power in different areas. The electrician typically works room by room. For safety, plan to be out during the panel changeover when the entire house loses power for several hours.