Metro Snapshot
Houston, TX has 2,302,878 residents in the committed Census/ACS city seed and sits in Harris County. For this guide, ProFix treats the city as the metro anchor because the gold-tier seed is keyed to contractor city records. Homeowners should expect work across Montrose, The Heights, and Third Ward, plus nearby blocks with slab-on-grade houses, master-planned subdivisions, townhomes, and older inner-loop housing. The prevailing demand for an electrician is shaped by the same mix: aging systems in older districts, fast-turn service in dense rental corridors, and planned replacement work in newer subdivisions. The population figure, neighborhood names, and contractor threshold are intentionally kept separate so a reader can tell what is demographic context, what is local geography, and what is ProFix coverage. Use this guide as a city-level hiring screen, then confirm the exact permit jurisdiction before work starts.
Trade Landscape
The current gold-tier seed shows 13 electricians in Houston for this trade, using the ProFix confidence threshold of full NAP, license evidence where available, and multi-source coverage. The strongest neighborhood short list for local screening is Montrose, The Heights, and Third Ward. For electricians, common service requests in this metro include panel and service upgrades, EV-charger circuits, and rewiring, lighting, and permit repairs. The count is not a market-size estimate; it is the number of high-confidence records ProFix can stand behind today. A homeowner should still ask whether the crew is city-based or only advertising into the metro from a nearby suburb, because travel time, inspection scheduling, and emergency dispatch fees can change the quote even when the contractor appears in the same search radius.
Local Board And Permits
Texas licensing context comes from the 2026 state-content seed: Texas does not license general contractors at the state level. The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) licenses Air Conditioning & Refrigeration contractors and electricians. For electricians in Houston, the relevant board reference is Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) — Electricians (https://www.tdlr.texas.gov/LicenseSearch/). The seed does not assume a separate municipal trade board for Houston; treat city review as permitting and inspection unless the city publishes a separate contractor-registration rule. Start with the City of Houston building or permitting office for application forms, inspection sequencing, and its published fee schedule. If the property is outside city limits, confirm whether Harris County or another local authority takes the permit. Save the permit number, inspection card, and fee receipt with the contract so the closeout paperwork matches the invoice.
Pricing Vs State Average
The statewide cost band for electrical work in Texas is $200 low, $1,700 typical, and $9,000 high in the state-content seed. ProFix applies a deterministic 25% Houston metro premium for population scale, labor overhead, parking, insurance, and rent pressure, which produces a local planning band of about $250 to $11,250, with $2,125 as the midpoint. Do not treat that as a bid. It is a screening range for deciding whether a quote is plausible before scope, materials, permit fees, after-hours response, and access constraints are priced in writing. If a quote falls far outside this band, ask the contractor to separate labor, materials, permit allowances, equipment, and contingency.
Questions To Ask
Ask three metro-specific questions before signing. 1. Will this job be permitted through the City of Houston, Harris County, or another authority, and who pays each fee on the local schedule? 2. Which recent jobs have you completed in Montrose, The Heights, and Third Ward, and did those homes require special access, old-system tie-ins, or inspection corrections? 3. For an electrician call, who will be on site, what license or registration will they present if asked, and how will change orders be approved before extra work begins? Also ask for the warranty terms in writing, including who handles a failed inspection or callback. Clear answers matter more than a low first number.