Looking for expert Electrical Services in Ajman? Contractors UAE provides professional Electrical Services services across all areas of Ajman. Our licensed team offers fast, reliable service at competitive prices.
Electrical faults are the leading cause of residential fires in the UAE. DEWA and Dubai Civil Defence data show that faulty wiring, overloaded circuits and unqualified electrical work are responsible for hundreds of property fires every year. Hiring an unlicensed electrician to save AED 200 can cost you everything.
Every electrician on our team holds a valid UAE electrical trade licence and complies with DEWA regulations, Abu Dhabi Distribution Company (ADDC) codes and all Emirates-specific electrical safety requirements. We do not cut corners. Ever.
These symptoms require professional attention within hours — not days:
All electrical installations in Dubai must comply with the Dubai Distribution Code, which is based on IEC 60364 standards with UAE-specific modifications. Key requirements include: RCCB (residual current circuit breaker) protection on all socket circuits, circuit breakers sized correctly for cable ratings, and specific earthing arrangements for both TN-S and TN-C-S systems common in Dubai buildings. Any major electrical installation must be designed and supervised by a DEWA-approved contractor — which we are.
Abu Dhabi Distribution Company requirements closely follow DEWA but with specific additions for coastal environments, particularly around IP-rated fittings for outdoor and bathroom use. All outdoor wiring in Abu Dhabi properties must use conduit systems rated for UAE UV exposure — standard PVC conduit becomes brittle and cracks within 3–5 years of direct sunlight exposure.
Sharjah Electricity and Water Authority follows similar standards to DEWA. A significant difference in older Sharjah buildings: many were wired using aluminium conductors in the 1980s–1990s. Aluminium wiring requires specific connector and termination methods — standard copper connectors used on aluminium conductors create galvanic corrosion and overheating at joints. We identify and address aluminium wiring during every inspection in older Sharjah properties.
Smart home adoption in UAE villas has accelerated since 2020. The core smart home electrical components that require professional wiring include:
Lutron Caseta, Legrand Netatmo and Philips Hue systems are the most installed in UAE villas. All require a neutral wire at every switch position — older UAE buildings wired without neutral at switches require a wiring upgrade before smart switches can be installed. We assess which switch positions need neutral wiring and route additional wire through existing conduit where possible, avoiding wall opening in most cases.
For new builds and complete renovations, we pre-wire for full home automation using structured cabling — Cat6A data cables to every room, HDMI runs from AV rack positions to screen locations, speaker cable to planned audio zones, and dedicated 16A circuits for future EV charging and high-power AV equipment. Installing automation-ready wiring during a renovation costs a fraction of retrofitting later.
Dubai's EV adoption rate is among the highest in the Middle East. Home EV charging points require a dedicated 32A circuit from the DB, typically a 7.4kW single-phase or 22kW three-phase charger. We install all major brands including Zappi, Wallbox, ABB and locally distributed models. DEWA approval is required for home EV charger installations in Dubai — we handle the application as part of the installation.
Distribution board replacement is the single most impactful electrical upgrade available in an older UAE property. Old fuse-wire boards and early MCB panels without RCCB protection are genuine fire and electrocution risks. Modern RCCB-protected distribution boards detect earth leakage currents as low as 30mA and disconnect the circuit within 40 milliseconds — fast enough to prevent cardiac arrest from shock, and fast enough to prevent electrical fires from ignition.
Signs your DB needs replacement: breakers tripping without apparent reason, a fuse-wire board (never acceptable in a property with families), RCCB absent from any circuit, or a board older than 20 years in UAE conditions. We supply and install Schneider Electric, Legrand and Hager boards — all certified for UAE electrical environment.
At current DEWA electricity tariffs, replacing a 50W halogen downlight with a 7W LED equivalent saves approximately AED 85 per bulb per year in a typical Dubai household usage pattern. A standard Dubai apartment with 20 downlights saves AED 1,700 per year. The LED upgrade pays for itself in under 12 months in most UAE homes.
We design and install LED lighting systems that match or exceed the colour rendering and light distribution of the halogen systems they replace. This matters — cheap LED retrofits produce uneven, harsh light that makes rooms look worse than the halogens they replaced. We specify and install quality LED from Philips, Osram and GE with CRI 90+ ratings for accurate colour rendering.
Certain electrical works in Dubai require a DEWA NOC before a licensed contractor can begin. These include: new DB installations, service connection upgrades, generator connections, major rewiring projects and solar PV grid connections. The application process requires approved technical drawings, single-line diagrams and load calculations submitted through DEWA's online portal.
Our team prepares all technical documentation, submits the application and follows up with DEWA until approval is received. DEWA approval typically takes 5–15 working days. We plan project timelines around this so your overall renovation schedule is not disrupted.
Legally, no. UAE electrical regulations require all wiring work to be carried out by a licensed electrical contractor. Beyond legality, smart switch installation requires correct neutral wiring identification, load assessment for dimmer compatibility and programming — tasks where errors cause component damage or fire risk. Our licensed team installs smart switches correctly and programs them as part of the service.
Three causes account for 90% of repeated tripping: the circuit is overloaded for its rated amperage, a wiring fault downstream is causing a fault current, or the breaker itself has become mechanically fatigued after repeated trips and no longer holds correctly. We test the circuit load, check for faults and replace the breaker if it has become unreliable — all in one visit.
A 3-bedroom UAE villa typically requires 5–8 working days for a full rewire from DB to every outlet and fitting. A 5-bedroom villa takes 10–15 days. We work systematically by zone, restoring power to completed areas before moving to the next, so the property is not without electricity throughout.
We handle all electrical works for solar PV systems — inverter installation, DC cable runs from panels to inverter, AC connection to the DB, DEWA net metering application and connection. For the panels themselves and structural roof mounting, we work with our solar installation partners and coordinate the full project as a single point of contact.
UAE villas are typically supplied with a three-phase 380V / 50Hz electrical supply from DEWA, with a three-phase metering point at the property boundary. However, many older UAE villas were internally wired as single-phase only — meaning only one of the three available phases is being used inside the property. This single-phase internal distribution is increasingly inadequate for modern UAE villa loads: large central AC compressors, EV chargers, induction hob ranges, walk-in refrigerators and large entertainment systems all benefit from or require three-phase distribution.
Converting a UAE villa from single-phase internal distribution to balanced three-phase distribution requires rewiring the distribution board and redistributing circuits across the three phases in a balanced manner. The result is up to 3x the available power capacity without any upgrade to the incoming DEWA supply, plus improved motor efficiency for AC compressors and other rotating equipment connected to the correctly phased circuit. We assess three-phase distribution requirements as part of every major UAE villa electrical upgrade or renovation project.
For villas with solar PV systems, three-phase distribution is essential for systems above approximately 5kW — single-phase solar inverters at this scale can cause voltage imbalance issues on the DEWA network that trigger automatic disconnection. DEWA's net metering approval process for solar PV systems specifically addresses phase connection requirements. Our electrical team ensures all solar PV installation electrical work is correctly configured for DEWA net metering approval.
For landlords and homeowners investing in electrical upgrades, these specific improvements deliver the strongest combination of tenant appeal, safety improvement and return on investment in the UAE market:
UAE apartments built before 2010 have significantly fewer socket outlets than modern household appliance loads require. Bedrooms with 2 double sockets, living rooms with 4 doubles and kitchens with 3–4 dedicated appliance circuits are the minimum for a property that will attract quality tenants in 2025. Additional circuits with double socket outlets installed professionally cost AED 300–600 per socket position, including all wiring and DB modifications — a highly cost-effective upgrade relative to the rental premium a well-equipped apartment commands.
USB-integrated socket outlets — Type G sockets with built-in USB-A and USB-C charging ports — are now expected in any premium UAE rental or sale property. They eliminate the need for plug-in USB adapters at every charging point. Cost: AED 150–280 per point to replace an existing socket with a USB-integrated version; new USB socket installation from scratch AED 300–500 per point.
Converting halogen downlights to LED reduces the lighting electricity consumption by 80% and eliminates the regular bulb replacement cost — halogen MR16 bulbs in UAE conditions last 1,000–2,000 hours; quality LED equivalents last 25,000–50,000 hours. A 1-bedroom apartment with 20 halogen downlights saves AED 1,500–2,000 per year in electricity after LED conversion. The payback period for LED lighting in a UAE property is typically 8–14 months, making it the fastest-returning electrical investment available.
UAE residential electrical systems operate at 220–240V / 50Hz with Type G (British Standard BS 1363) socket outlets. The high voltage means that electrical shock is immediately dangerous — UAE electrical safety incidents require professional assessment of every incident, not a reset-and-ignore response. If an appliance trips a circuit breaker in your UAE home, investigate why before resetting.
Common safety mistakes we see in UAE properties that must be corrected:
Commercial electrical requirements in the UAE differ from residential in scale and regulatory complexity. Dubai Municipality requires a licensed electrical contractor for all commercial installation and maintenance work, with regular DEWA inspection of commercial DB rooms and metering points. Our commercial electrical team holds the relevant Dubai Municipality contractor classification for commercial electrical work and maintains familiarity with the specific requirements of retail, hospitality, office and light industrial premises across the UAE.
Commercial services include: DB room design and installation for new commercial fit-outs, three-phase power installation for commercial kitchen equipment, LED lighting design and installation for retail environments, emergency lighting and exit sign systems to Dubai Civil Defence requirements, UPS system installation for IT infrastructure, and annual electrical safety testing with documentation.
An Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR) — called an electrical compliance certificate in UAE property transactions — is required when selling a UAE property, when changing a commercial tenancy, and when a landlord has reason to believe the electrical installation presents a risk. We conduct formal electrical installation condition assessments and issue written compliance reports documenting the condition of all circuits, protective devices, earthing and bonding arrangements.
This report identifies any Code 1 (immediately dangerous), Code 2 (potentially dangerous) or Code 3 (improvement recommended) items in the installation and provides a prioritised remediation plan. For property transactions, this report provides buyers and sellers with clear documentation of the electrical installation condition.
Our electrical teams cover the full UAE including Dubai (all areas — Marina, Downtown, JBR, Business Bay, Jumeirah, Springs, Meadows, Arabian Ranches, Mirdif, Deira, Bur Dubai), Sharjah (Al Khan, Al Majaz, Al Taawun, Industrial Area), Ajman, Abu Dhabi (city, Khalifa City, Yas Island, Saadiyat Island, Al Raha Beach), Ras Al Khaimah and Fujairah. Response times vary by location — Dubai and Sharjah same-day availability; northern emirates next-day standard with emergency response available.
Burning smells, sparking outlets or complete power failure require immediate professional attention. Call +971564528505 — 24/7 emergency electricians across Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman and Abu Dhabi. Licensed. DEWA-compliant. Insured.
A professional electrical inspection in a UAE property is a systematic assessment of every component of the electrical installation against the requirements of the applicable UAE electrical code. The inspection follows a defined sequence: visual inspection of the distribution board for correct labelling, circuit identification, protective device ratings, earth connectivity and evidence of overheating or moisture ingress. Circuit testing using calibrated test instruments verifies earth continuity, insulation resistance, polarity and RCCB trip response time — all of which degrade with age and UAE environmental exposure.
Earth continuity testing is particularly important in UAE properties because the UAE's humid coastal environment degrades the mechanical connections in the earthing system — screw terminals corrode, earth cables at building foundations develop resistance increases and bonding connections at metallic pipework and AC systems can fail without visual symptoms. A property with poor earth continuity can develop potentially dangerous touch voltages on metallic surfaces — the kind of situation that produces a mild tingle from touching a metal tap, which UAE residents sometimes dismiss as normal but which indicates a measurable earth fault.
Insulation resistance testing applies a DC test voltage to the wiring insulation and measures the resistance — a healthy PVC-insulated cable shows resistance in the hundreds of megaohms; degraded insulation from age, UV damage, rodent attack or overheating shows much lower values. UAE electrical cables in roof voids, outdoor runs and areas subject to direct sun exposure are particularly prone to insulation degradation. We identify areas of compromised insulation and recommend targeted rewiring of the affected circuit sections before a fault causes a fire or shock incident.
After the inspection, we provide a formal written report categorizing each finding by severity code: C1 for dangers requiring immediate disconnection, C2 for potentially dangerous conditions requiring prompt attention, C3 for recommended improvements and FI for items requiring further investigation. This report format is recognized by UAE property insurers and is accepted by Dubai Municipality for building safety certification purposes.
Power outages in Dubai are relatively uncommon compared to many markets but do occur during extreme summer demand peaks, transformer faults and major storm events. For UAE villa owners who work from home, who have medical equipment that requires continuous power, or who simply cannot face a UAE summer power cut, a standby generator is a worthwhile investment. The key specification decisions involve generator sizing, fuel type, installation location and auto-transfer switch (ATS) configuration.
Generator sizing for a UAE villa requires a load calculation of the critical circuits to be backed up — typically AC systems, refrigerators, lighting, sockets for communications and medical equipment. A 3-bedroom UAE villa with central AC typically requires a 15–22 kVA generator to run comfortably in summer. A full whole-property backup including all AC systems and appliances typically requires 35–50 kVA. Diesel generators are the standard choice for UAE residential standby applications — diesel fuel is widely available, fuel storage is safe in appropriate tanks and diesel generators start reliably in UAE heat conditions. We size, supply, install and commission generators from leading brands including Cummins, Perkins, Stamford and Kohler for UAE villa applications.
Electrical work pricing in UAE is highly variable and many UAE homeowners overpay significantly for simple work. Here is the honest pricing reference. Adding a new socket outlet on an existing circuit: AED 150–250 including surface conduit, back box, socket outlet and connection — assumes wall is accessible (no tile cutting required). Adding a new socket on a new dedicated circuit from the DB: AED 400–700 depending on cable run length, including MCB addition to the DB. Replacing a failed socket or switch: AED 60–120 including the new fitting and connection labour. Replacing a ceiling light fitting: AED 80–150 including new fitting if supplied, or AED 50–80 labour only if the fitting is customer-supplied.
DB replacement (consumer unit) for a UAE 3-bedroom apartment: AED 1,500–2,800 including new DB enclosure, MCBs, RCCBs and labour. For a UAE villa with a larger incoming supply: AED 2,500–4,500. These prices include all components and commissioning but may exclude any rewiring that is revealed as necessary after the DB is open and the circuit conditions are inspected. Installing a ring main (adding RCD protection to an existing radial circuit system): AED 800–2,000 depending on the number of circuits. Electrical inspection with full test documentation: AED 800–1,500 for a standard apartment; AED 1,500–3,000 for a villa depending on size and number of circuits. These are honest market rates — if you receive a quote significantly below these figures, ask specifically what it includes.
UAE electrical regulations and DEWA requirements specify that all electrical installation work must be carried out by a licensed electrical contractor. This is not a bureaucratic technicality — it reflects the genuine risks of electrical work done without proper knowledge, tools and test equipment. However, some very specific tasks can be performed safely by a competent and careful homeowner without formal electrical qualification. Replacing a like-for-like light fitting on an existing ceiling rose, after turning off the circuit breaker and verifying the circuit is dead with a non-contact voltage tester: a task that presents low risk if done carefully and correctly. Replacing a standard flush socket or switch with an identical replacement, after turning off the circuit breaker: similarly low-risk for a careful homeowner.
What you should never attempt without professional qualification: any work on the main distribution board or consumer unit, any work involving cable installation through walls or ceilings, any modification to circuits serving wet areas (bathroom, kitchen), any work on three-phase supplies, any installation of new circuits, and any work on the outdoor supply or meter. The consequences of DB work done incorrectly include house fires, electrocution of the homeowner or a subsequent occupant who touches an incorrectly wired fitting, and invalidation of your home insurance. The saving from avoiding a professional electrician for these tasks is not worth any of these risks.
How do I know if my UAE home needs a new distribution board? Several clear indicators: circuit breakers trip repeatedly under loads that should not cause tripping — this indicates undersized breakers or overloaded circuits that cannot safely carry the demand. The DB does not have RCD (residual current device) or RCCB protection — older UAE DBs were installed without RCCB protection, which is now required by UAE electrical code and provides essential protection against earth faults and electrocution. The DB has fuses rather than circuit breakers — fuses cannot be reset and do not provide the same level of protection as modern MCBs. There are signs of heat damage, scorching or corrosion inside the DB enclosure. The DB is labelled in Arabic or another language and you cannot identify which breaker corresponds to which circuit — a safety risk in any electrical emergency.
Why do my lights flicker in my UAE home? Light flickering in a UAE property has several possible causes. Flickering when a large appliance switches on — the washing machine, AC compressor or dishwasher — indicates voltage fluctuation from the sudden load on the electrical circuit. This is typically caused by undersized cable serving the circuit or a loose connection at the distribution board. Constant random flickering with no clear trigger usually indicates a loose connection at the light fitting itself, at the circuit breaker or at a junction box in the cable run. In LED light fittings specifically, flickering can indicate an incompatibility between the LED driver and the dimmer switch (if fitted) — a common issue when LED bulbs are installed in dimmer circuits designed for incandescent bulbs. Our electrical team diagnoses and resolves all of these correctly — the specific cause determines the specific fix.
Is it safe to use a UAE power socket with a UK plug adapter? UAE power outlets are the British standard BS 1363 three-pin socket, the same format used in the UK, so direct connection of UK-standard plugs requires no adapter. European (Type C/F) and US (Type A/B) plugs do require adapters for UAE sockets. The adapters available in UAE supermarkets and electronics shops are generally safe for low-power devices — phone chargers, laptop chargers, small appliances. For high-power appliances — kettles, hair dryers, powerful heaters — the adapter quality is more critical; cheap adapters can overheat under sustained high-current loads. UAE mains voltage is 220–240V, 50Hz — the same as the UK and EU but different from the USA (110V, 60Hz). Any appliance rated for US voltage only cannot be safely used in UAE, even with a pin adapter.
UAE electric vehicle adoption is growing rapidly — DEWA's Green Charger public network is expanding, but home charging remains the most convenient and cost-effective solution for UAE residents. Installing a home EV charger requires a dedicated electrical circuit rated for the charger's maximum output. A standard Level 2 home EV charger (7.2kW, which charges most UAE market EVs at 30–50km of range per hour) requires a dedicated 32A, 240V circuit from the distribution board, with a Type 2 outlet or tethered cable installed at the parking location. For UAE villas with basement or covered parking, the cable route from the DB to the parking area is typically 15–40 metres and may require surface conduit, under-floor conduit or ceiling-mounted cable management depending on the building construction.
We are authorised installers for the leading UAE market EV charger brands including Wallbox, EVBox, ABB and ChargePoint. All installations include the circuit from the DB, appropriate cable protection and management, the charger unit installation, and testing and commissioning with the specific EV model if the client requests. DEWA regulations require notification of home EV charger installations over a specific capacity — we manage this notification process as part of every installation. For UAE apartment residents where dedicated parking bays have electrical supply, we install wall-mounted EV chargers in the allocated parking position with the building management's approval process handled by our team. Contact us at +971564528505 to discuss your EV charger installation.
All electrical work carried out by licensed UAE electricians compliant with DEWA requirements and UAE electrical code. We do not cut corners on earthing, circuit protection or cable rating — ever. Every installation is tested with calibrated instruments before handover. We provide written certification for all new electrical installations. Emergency fault response available 24/7 across Dubai, Sharjah and Ajman. WhatsApp +971564528505 for urgent electrical assistance.
We provide Electrical Services services across all major areas of UAE including Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman and Abu Dhabi.
Yes, all our electricians hold valid UAE electrical licenses and are trained to comply with DEWA and other emirate electricity authority requirements.
Yes, we offer 24/7 emergency electrical services across Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman and Abu Dhabi.
Yes, we install smart switches, dimmers, automated lighting systems and full smart home electrical infrastructure.
Signs you need an inspection include flickering lights, frequent circuit breaker trips, burning smells or discolored outlets. Call us immediately for safety.
WhatsApp us now for a free quote — we respond in minutes. Available 24/7 across UAE.