Hi Julie. Can you tell me what qualifications someone needs to legally do eicr. ?
None!
The requirement - depends on your region or purpose is basically that you are competent.
If it's for rental properties then it's worded slightly different than for general EICR (Which by the way is the name of the report - not the actual inspection/process which is actually a periodic inspection and test - although everyone uses the terms interchangeably).
In this case, it uses the terms
qualified and
competent although they aren't really defined.
In practice most people doing these tend to be part of a competent person scheme which has additional rules, however most of these are really aimed at initial work etc - basically the general installation work an electrician will do day to day.
So in practice an electrician will do their initial training, learn things like the building and wiring regulations, have experience of installation, and have their installation work checked, show they have insurance and so on.
Some people have limited qualifications (Domestic installer for example) - in which case their scheme won't usually cover them for other work like periodic inspections. Others may be fully covered as they did a full apprenticeship, but unfortunately may not have the full depth of experience needed due to being fairly recently qualified.
It isn't a great situation in my opinion, you could have someone with fantastic experience and knowledge of the regs - basically they would do a fantastic and truthful job, has insurance etc, but don't look too good on paper - for instance not in a scheme; and someone else who is in a scheme, but has limited experience, perhaps only knowing what is correct now, with no idea of previous standard or work practices, and therefore "overreacts" throwing C1's and C2's around like confetti.
Which one would people go for - the likelihood is the second one as general guidance is to use someone on the competent persons scheme.
Unfortunately I feel a few unscrupulous ones are seeing it all as an opportunity to get easy work for which they often overcharge as well.