Electrician Leads from Contractors Who Know Your Work

That Actually Close.

Stop fighting over shared leads. HVAC techs, remodelers, and home inspectors already have customers who need panel upgrades, rewiring, and code fixes. They just need an electrician they trust.

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Electrician lead gen is broken.

Here's what you're dealing with.

Shared Leads Are a Race to the Bottom

You pay $45 for a "panel upgrade" lead from HomeAdvisor. So do 4 other electricians. Price drops. Margins disappear. You're bidding $2,800 on a $3,500 job just to win.

Lead Services Don't Know a Service Call from a Rewire

You're paying the same rate for "my outlet doesn't work" ($150 job) and "I need a 200-amp panel upgrade" ($4,500 job). No filtering. No context.

"Free Estimate" Shoppers Who Ghost

You drive 45 minutes for a quote. Spend an hour in their attic. They say "we'll think about it" and never call back. The lead service already charged you.

How LeadChuck works for electricians

1

Set Your Price

You set one lead fee — that's what you pay for every referral that comes your way. Be competitive, but set a price you're comfortable with.

2

Get Referrals from Contractors Who Trust You

HVAC techs find panels that can't handle new equipment. Home inspectors flag Federal Pacific breakers. Remodelers need circuits pulled. They refer to you.

3

Close Jobs, Keep the Profit

You get the customer's info, call them, mention who referred you. Trust is already built. You close. You pay the referral fee. The rest is yours.

The referral flywheel in action

Mike the HVAC tech is installing a new 4-ton AC unit. He opens the panel and sees 100 amps — not enough capacity. He refers the homeowner to you through LeadChuck. You quote the panel upgrade: $3,800 for a 200-amp panel, new breakers, permit, inspection. Customer says yes — Mike already vouched for you. You pay Mike's $75 referral fee. While you're in the panel, the homeowner mentions they want an EV charger for their new Tesla. You quote it: $1,200 installed. Easy add-on. The homeowner asks if you know anyone for drywall repair — you cut a few access holes. You refer your drywall guy and set a $45 referral fee.

Jobs closed: $5,000 in revenue. Referral fee paid: $75. Referral fee earned: $45. Net marketing cost: $30. Compare that to $180+ for 4 shared leads on Thumbtack.

Who sends electricians leads?

These trades encounter your work constantly — and get paid to send it your way.

HVAC Technicians

New AC/furnace installs require panel capacity. They find undersized panels, aluminum wiring, code violations.

General Contractors

Kitchen remodels need new circuits. Additions need subpanels. They need a licensed electrician on every major project.

Home Inspectors

Every inspection report flags something: double-tapped breakers, missing GFCIs, Federal Pacific panels.

Plumbers

They're in the same walls and ceilings. They spot knob-and-tube wiring, burned junction boxes, DIY disasters.

Real Estate Agents

Pre-listing electrical updates. Buyer inspection fixes. "The house needs a new panel before I can write the offer."

Who do electricians refer out?

Every job creates referral opportunities. Turn them into income.

Drywall / Painters

$35–$75

You cut access holes for rewiring, panel swaps, junction box repairs.

HVAC Technicians

$60–$100

After the panel upgrade, they can finally install that new AC.

Plumbers

$50–$85

Customer mentions low water pressure while you're quoting.

General Contractors

$100–$150

The electrical work reveals bigger issues — rotted framing, mold.

Solar Installers

$75–$125

Panel upgrade customers often ask about solar.

Simple, transparent pricing

Free to join

No monthly fees

Pay per lead

You set the price

10% platform fee

Only on lead fees

Earn referrals

Offset your costs

First month, I got 4 panel upgrade referrals from HVAC guys I'd never met. Closed 3 of them — $11,200 in work for $225 in referral fees. Then I started referring out drywall work and made $180 back. My net lead cost was basically nothing.
D

Derek W.

Licensed electrical contractor, Dallas, TX · 12 years in business

Frequently asked questions

Panel upgrades, whole-house rewiring, code violation repairs, EV charger installs, generator hookups, and lighting installs. You set one flat lead price that covers all referral types.

LeadChuck makes those relationships pay both ways. Your HVAC buddy refers you a panel job — he gets paid. You refer him an AC replacement — you get paid. Plus you get access to contractors outside your current network.

Those platforms sell the same lead to 4-5 electricians. LeadChuck leads are exclusive referrals from contractors who specifically chose you. One customer, one electrician.

Yes. Booked solid? On vacation? Don't do commercial? Refer it to another electrician on LeadChuck and earn a referral fee.

You only pay for accepted leads. If the job isn't what was described, dispute it. We side with the contractor.

Ready to get electrician leads that actually close?

Join free. See leads in your area. Pay only when you accept.

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