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Why DIY Electrical Work is Risky for San Antonio Homeowners | Good Times Electric
Important Safety Information for San Antonio Homeowners

Why DIY Electrical
Work is Riskier
Than You Think

The satisfaction of a completed home project is real — but not all projects are created equal. Electrical work sits in a category of its own. What looks simple from a YouTube video can create invisible hazards that take months or years to cause a fire, shock, or failed home inspection.

TX Licensed & Insured
24/7 Emergency Service
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Serving All San Antonio

DIY Electrical — Risk Summary

3 Reasons to Always Call a Pro

  • 01
    Electrocution & Shock 110V household current can be lethal
    Critical
  • 02
    Code Violations & Permit Issues Unpermitted work causes failed inspections
    High
  • 03
    Hidden Fire Hazards Faulty wiring can smolder for years
    Critical
  • 04
    Insurance Denial Unlicensed work voids most policies
    High
  • 05
    Home Resale Problems Unpermitted work surfaces during sale
    Moderate

The Training Behind
Every Licensed Electrician

We completely understand the appeal of DIY home projects — they can be rewarding, cost-effective, and give you a real sense of ownership over your home. But electrical work exists in an entirely different category of risk than painting a room or replacing a faucet.

The electricians on our team didn’t just watch a few tutorials. Becoming a licensed journeyman electrician in Texas requires a minimum of 8,000 hours of supervised apprenticeship — roughly four years of on-the-job training — plus classroom coursework and a state licensing exam administered by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). Master electricians must go even further.

That depth of training exists for a simple reason: the electrical system in your San Antonio home is genuinely dangerous, and the consequences of a mistake aren’t always immediate. A wire connected incorrectly in your wall today might not cause a problem for six months — right up until it starts a fire at 2 a.m.

Below, we walk through the five most significant risks of DIY electrical work so you can make a truly informed decision before picking up a screwdriver.

What It Takes

The Path to Becoming a Licensed Texas Electrician

  • Apprenticeship Coursework 300–1,000+ hours of classroom instruction covering theory, code, and safety
  • 8,000 Hours On-the-Job Training Approximately 4 years of supervised field experience across residential and commercial projects
  • Texas State Licensing Exam Passing a state-administered exam through TDLR covering NEC code and TX regulations
  • Ongoing Continuing Education Texas licensed electricians must maintain CE hours to stay current with code updates
01
Risk Factor Electrocution & Severe Shock

Household Voltage
Can Kill You

Here’s a fact that surprises many homeowners: the static shock you feel touching a doorknob can carry upward of 20,000 volts — yet it doesn’t seriously hurt you. Why? Because voltage without adequate current doesn’t cause significant injury. A standard 110-volt household outlet, by contrast, delivers enough current to cause cardiac arrest, severe burns, and death if handled incorrectly.

The danger isn’t just touching a live wire. Capacitors in appliances can hold a lethal charge long after being unplugged. A “de-energized” circuit can become re-energized unexpectedly if another switch or breaker is operated. Moisture on hands or a concrete floor dramatically lowers your body’s resistance, making even a minor contact far more dangerous.

According to the Electrical Safety Foundation International (ESFI), approximately 400 Americans die from electrocution annually, and thousands more suffer non-fatal electrical injuries — many of which happen in the home during attempted repairs.

Our licensed San Antonio electricians follow strict lockout/tagout procedures, use insulated tools rated for the voltages they’re working with, and test circuits with calibrated meters before touching anything. That protocol comes from years of hands-on training — not a tutorial.

Electrocution Risk

Severity: Critical

400+Deaths/Year US
110VHousehold Voltage
  • Never assume a circuit is off without testing it
  • Wet hands multiply electrocution risk dramatically
  • Capacitors retain charge after power is cut
  • Licensed pros use insulated, rated tools
02
Risk Factor Code Violations & Permit Problems

Unpermitted Work Creates
Long-Term Problems

San Antonio follows the National Electrical Code (NEC), and most electrical work beyond replacing a fixture requires a permit pulled with the City of San Antonio Development Services Department. Skipping the permit process might feel like a shortcut in the moment, but it creates a paper trail problem that surfaces at the worst possible time — usually when you’re trying to sell your home.

During a real estate transaction, a home inspection will often flag unpermitted electrical work. Buyers can — and do — walk away or negotiate heavily for the cost of bringing the work up to code. In some cases, the city may require the work to be torn out and redone entirely by a licensed contractor, at your expense.

The NEC is updated every three years. What was code-compliant in 2005 may not meet today’s standards. Our electricians stay current with every revision — and we pull all required permits so your work is fully documented and inspectable.

Good Times Electric handles the entire permit and inspection process on your behalf. You’ll never have to navigate the City of San Antonio permitting system yourself — we take care of it so your completed job is 100% above board, documented, and insurable.

Code & Permit Risk

Severity: High

3yrNEC Update Cycle
100%Permit Compliance
  • We pull all required San Antonio permits
  • City inspection scheduled and managed by us
  • All work documented for future home sale
  • Current with 2023 NEC code requirements
03
Risk Factor Hidden Wiring Fire Hazards

Faulty Wiring Can
Smolder For Months

This is the risk that most DIY enthusiasts genuinely don’t consider: an electrical mistake doesn’t always announce itself immediately. A loose wire connection, an undersized wire gauge for the load it’s carrying, or a missed ground can create an arc fault inside your wall — a small, intermittent spark that generates heat over time, slowly charring the surrounding wood framing until a fire ignites.

The NFPA reports that electrical fires account for an estimated 51,000 home fires annually in the United States — causing over 500 deaths, 1,400 injuries, and $1.3 billion in property damage. A significant portion of these fires start in wiring that was improperly installed and had been quietly failing for a long time before igniting.

Arc-Fault Circuit Interrupter (AFCI) breakers are specifically designed to detect the erratic electrical signatures of arcing wires and shut the circuit down before a fire starts. Good Times Electric installs AFCI protection throughout San Antonio homes as part of both new work and safety upgrades.

Our electricians know proper wire gauge selection, correct connector types, minimum bend radii for cables, and how to properly terminate wires at every connection point. These details — invisible inside a finished wall — are exactly what separate a safe installation from a fire risk.

Electrical Fire Risk

Severity: Critical

51KHome Fires/Year
$1.3BAnnual Damage
  • Arc faults can smolder inside walls for months
  • Wrong wire gauge = heat buildup over time
  • AFCI breakers detect and stop arc faults
  • We install AFCI protection on all circuits
04
Risk Factor Insurance Voidance & Resale Liability

Your Policy May Not
Cover Unlicensed Work

Most standard homeowner’s insurance policies in Texas contain a clause that allows the insurer to deny claims resulting from work that was performed without a required permit or by an unlicensed contractor. This means that if a fire or electrical damage event is traced back to unpermitted DIY work, you may be left covering the entire loss out of pocket — even if you’ve been faithfully paying premiums for years.

Beyond insurance, consider what happens when you sell your home. Texas real estate law requires sellers to disclose known defects. Unpermitted electrical work is a known defect. Buyers and their inspectors are increasingly sophisticated — and unpermitted work that’s been hiding in a wall for years tends to surface right when you need the closing to go smoothly.

Every job Good Times Electric performs is fully permitted, inspected, and documented. That paper trail protects your insurance coverage, satisfies buyers during resale, and gives you complete peace of mind that the work was done right.

The math is simple: the cost of hiring a licensed electrician is almost always a fraction of what unpermitted work costs you when something goes wrong. Call us for a free, no-obligation quote and see what professional electrical work actually costs in San Antonio — you may be pleasantly surprised.

Insurance & Resale Risk

Severity: High

$0Claim Payout if Denied
100%Our Jobs Permitted
  • Unpermitted work = likely insurance denial
  • TX law requires seller disclosure of defects
  • Home inspectors identify unpermitted electrical
  • Good Times provides full permit documentation

Jobs That Require a
Licensed Pro in San Antonio

There are some home projects where DIY is perfectly reasonable — painting, landscaping, minor carpentry. Electrical work generally isn’t one of them. Here are the jobs we see San Antonio homeowners most commonly attempt themselves, and why each one should be left to a licensed electrician.

Panel Replacement or Upgrade

Working inside a live electrical panel is extremely dangerous. The main breaker does not de-energize the incoming service wires. This job requires pulling a permit and a licensed electrician every time.

Adding New Circuits or Outlets

Running a new circuit from the panel requires correct wire gauge, proper breaker sizing, and in San Antonio, a permit. Undersized wiring is a leading cause of electrical fires.

EV Charger Installation

A Level 2 EV charger requires a dedicated 240V circuit. Incorrect installation can damage your vehicle, void its warranty, and create a serious shock or fire hazard in your garage.

Rewiring Old or Damaged Wiring

Replacing aluminum wiring, knob-and-tube wiring, or damaged cable behind walls involves working in energized spaces and requires proper splicing techniques and inspectable work.

Outdoor or Underground Electrical

Outdoor circuits must use weatherproof boxes, GFCI protection, and correct burial depth for underground cable. Improper outdoor wiring creates shock and fire risks unique to Texas weather conditions.

GFCI & AFCI Upgrades

While replacing a GFCI outlet looks simple, ensuring the correct load/line wiring orientation and testing downstream protection requires a working knowledge of circuit topology most homeowners don’t have.

Not sure whether your project requires a licensed electrician? Call us at (210) 760-6407 — we’ll give you an honest answer at no charge. If it’s genuinely something a homeowner can safely handle themselves, we’ll tell you. That’s the kind of straightforward service San Antonio deserves.

100% Satisfaction Guarantee

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TX Licensed & Insured

Verify our license at TDLR anytime — we’re always current.

On Time, Every Time

We show up when promised — or your service call is free.

Upfront Flat-Rate Pricing

You approve every cost before any work begins — no surprises.

Why Our Customers
Chose a Licensed Pro

5.0
★★★★★
150+ Google Reviews
★★★★★

“I almost tried to add an outlet myself after watching some videos — glad I didn’t. Good Times came out, found the circuit was already overloaded, and explained exactly why adding to it would have been a fire risk. Honest, professional, and got it done right the same day.”

J
Jason P.
Alamo Heights, San Antonio TX
★★★★★

“Had a previous owner’s DIY wiring discovered during our home inspection — nightmare situation. Good Times Electric fixed everything properly, pulled the permits, passed city inspection. We were able to close on time. These guys literally saved our home sale.”

K
Karen & Mike T.
Stone Oak, San Antonio TX
★★★★★

“Called about an EV charger install. I’d looked at doing it myself but the panel situation was more complicated than I expected. Good Times walked me through everything, gave me a fair quote, and handled the permit. Zero headaches. Charger works perfectly.”

C
Chris V.
Helotes, TX

DIY Electrical — Frequently Asked
Questions from San Antonio Homeowners

Can a homeowner legally do their own electrical work in Texas?
Texas law does allow homeowners to perform limited electrical work on their own primary residence. However, most work beyond basic fixture swaps still requires a permit from the City of San Antonio, and that work must pass inspection. The permit process exists to verify the work is safe — skipping it creates liability and insurance risk. If you’re unsure, call us for a free assessment.
What happens if my DIY electrical work causes a fire or damage?
If your homeowner’s insurance investigates a claim and finds the cause was unpermitted or unlicensed electrical work, they have grounds to deny the claim entirely. Beyond insurance, you may face city fines and be required to have the work brought up to code at your expense before the home can be sold or re-occupied.
How do I know if my home has unpermitted electrical work from a previous owner?
Signs of unpermitted electrical work include mismatched breaker and wire sizes, non-standard panel wiring, outlets without proper grounding, receptacles in unusual locations, or work that doesn’t match the style of your home’s original construction. A licensed electrician’s safety inspection can identify these issues. Book an inspection here.
How long does it take to become a licensed electrician in Texas?
In Texas, becoming a licensed journeyman electrician requires a minimum of 8,000 hours of supervised on-the-job training (roughly 4 years), plus classroom coursework and passing a state exam through TDLR. A master electrician license requires additional experience beyond that. This is why there’s simply no shortcut that produces a safely-trained electrician.
Is hiring a licensed electrician actually more expensive than DIY?
In the short term, yes — you pay for materials plus labor. But when you factor in the cost of permits, the risk of insurance denial, the potential for costly redo work, and the very real safety risks, professional electrical work is almost always the better financial decision long-term. Good Times Electric offers free upfront quotes with flat-rate pricing — no surprises.
How do I verify a San Antonio electrician is properly licensed?
You can verify any Texas electrician’s license in real time at tdlr.texas.gov/LicenseSearch. Always verify before allowing anyone to work on your home’s electrical system. Good Times Electric is fully licensed and we encourage every customer to verify our credentials.

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Handle It Safely

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