ᐅ Electrical Billing – What Is the Standard Approach?

Created on: 13 Sep 2019 21:18
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drno1234
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drno1234
13 Sep 2019 21:18
Dear Forum,

We are currently building a house through a construction company. The building specifications state there will be 4 sockets per room. Since this is not sufficient for us, we have chosen to add extra sockets in some places. Price according to the electrician: 90€ for a single socket, 120€ for a double socket.

I would like to explain our issue using the following example:
For one room, we selected
- 1x single socket
- 3x double sockets
According to our understanding, we should pay the extra cost compared to the building specification as follows:
3x surcharge from single to double socket = 3x(120€ - 90€) = 90€.

However, the electrician calculates the cost as follows:
- 2x double sockets cover the 4 sockets per room specified in the building description
- in addition, extra costs apply for 1x double socket + 1x single socket = 120€ + 90€ = 210€.

=> The electrician is charging more than twice what we expected—solely due to a different calculation method.

My question to the forum is:
Is the electrician using a common calculation method, or is this a case of overcharging?
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ypg
13 Sep 2019 21:38
Take these 4 single outlets and have them privately doubled afterwards.
I have never read or heard that the electrician is rude through direct contact.
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dhd82
13 Sep 2019 23:50
I would also make sure that the additional power outlets and, if applicable, any cooktop connections are not handled by the construction company, because 90 € for a single additional outlet is extortionate.

We moved into our house this year, built by a general contractor, and paid an extra 19.50 € per additional outlet for completed work. Friends of ours paid 26 € with a different general contractor, but both prices are still far from what you were quoted.
opalau13 Sep 2019 23:51
I understand this to mean that the price already includes the electrician's work.
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ypg
13 Sep 2019 23:54
opalau schrieb:

I understand that this is already the price from the electrician..

What does this mean to you?
Nothing else is mentioned. Direct costs should be lower.
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hanse987
14 Sep 2019 00:06
At that price, what kind of network outlet is being charged?