FLH Electric in Baltimore: Licensed Electrician for Residential Panel Upgrades and Code Compliance

FLH Electric is a licensed electrical contractor serving Baltimore homeowners with a focus on panel upgrades, service expansions, and permit-ready work that passes city inspection on the first attempt.

What FLH Electric actually is

A single-owner operation run by a master electrician who specializes in residential jobs that require Baltimore Department of Housing permits and city sign-off. The business handles everything from 100-amp to 200-amp panel replacements, 240-volt appliance circuits, and full rewires, but does not do low-voltage work like network cabling or security systems. FLH operates out of Baltimore and holds the state electrician's license required for any work involving main service panels or work that must pass municipal inspection.

Services and pricing

Panel upgrades range from $2,500 to $4,500 depending on whether the existing meter and service lines can be reused; full panel replacement with new meter costs more. A single 240-volt circuit for an electric vehicle charger, range, or dryer runs $800 to $1,200. Outlet and switch installations start at $150 per location. The business charges a flat trip fee of $75 for estimates, which is credited toward the job if hired.

Labor on smaller jobs runs $85 to $95 per hour, with most non-panel work quoted flat-rate once the electrician has walked the site. Permit costs (paid to the city, not to FLH) range from $50 to $150 depending on job scope. Request a quote by phone or email to confirm current pricing.

How it compares to other Baltimore electricians

Most Baltimore electricians operate one of two ways: large companies like Electrical Solutions or Rooter that maintain call centers and charge premium rates (often $120 to $150 per hour labor plus $150 to $300 estimates), or unlicensed handymen who will not touch panel work or permit jobs. FLH sits between them. It is fully licensed and permitted to do any residential electrical work in Baltimore, but it operates lean enough that hourly rates run 20 to 30 percent below franchise shops. The tradeoff is no 24-hour emergency response; FLH schedules jobs Monday through Friday and charges a same-day premium if work is urgent. Choose FLH for budget-conscious homeowners who can plan ahead and need a panel upgrade or city-inspected work. Choose a larger shop if you need weekend availability or have an electrical emergency at midnight.

Who it suits and who it does not suit

FLH works well for homeowners adding an EV charger, upgrading from an old 100-amp service, or replacing a failed panel before the city condemns it. It also suits owners doing major renovations who need all work permitted and inspected. It does not offer emergency calls, does not handle commercial work, and does not do low-voltage or data jobs. If you need same-day response for a tripped breaker or dead outlet on a Saturday, call a larger outfit or an after-hours service line instead.

What the first visit involves

Call or email with photos of your existing panel and a description of the work you want done. FLH will schedule an estimate, visit in person to inspect the panel, service lines, and the circuit or appliance you are installing, and provide a written quote the same day or within 24 hours. If you accept, you will sign a permit application (FLH obtains the permit on your behalf), and work is scheduled once the city issues the permit, usually within one to two weeks. The electrician will be on-site for the full job and will contact the city for final inspection before closing out the permit. You get a copy of the signed inspection sheet, which is essential if you later sell the home.

Hours, parking, and logistics

FLH operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., and does not offer weekend or evening appointments. Parking is on-street; there is no dedicated lot. If your home is in a permit zone, have a spot available or be prepared to move your car on the day of work. Jobs are scheduled at your address in Baltimore proper; service areas outside city limits may incur a travel fee.

A fully licensed electrician who handles panel upgrades without shortcuts and knows Baltimore's permit process is rare enough to justify looking. FLH has built its reputation on jobs that pass inspection the first time, which saves the cost and aggravation of re-scheduling city inspectors.