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Good afternoon everyone, I am Alex and I'm new here.

I am posting this to ask for advice with how I should approach this situation.

We called in an electrician, and as confirmed in writing by messages, the original request was to change the socket covers and change lightbulbs through the flat (1 bedroom flat). After completing the job, the electrician sends us an invoice which lists the labour and material costs, and a rough breakdown of the works done. The final bill is OVER ÂŁ2,000 (almost all of it labour) and lists 30 hours of work. On top of the requested works, it also details a lot of other works, which were not requested nor authorised by us, including various tests and other changes. To make the situation more difficult, we were away during this time as the flat was under renovation and could not confirm what works exactly have been at the time.

Given this extremely unreasonable bill, what is the best way to approach the situation?

Any help would be appreciated, and thank you for your advice.
 
We never quite know the full picture do we. I remember quoting around ÂŁ600 for changing quite a few sockets and switches. It seemed alot, but it would have taken quite some time. Also, you know that 10% of them are going to go wrong, threads disappear on the lugs, screws snap, you need to use deeper metal back boxes etc etc. I didn't get the job.

30 hours of work at ÂŁ45 p/hour = ÂŁ1350 plus the cost of sockets/switches, plus the extra work. Could be around ÂŁ2000. I do like trying to play devils advocate. we've got to try and look at the other side, however unlikely.

It's very odd the electrician just choose to do lots of extra work, almost too odd. There are many different explanations for this. The most obvious one would be lack of effective and clear communication between customer and electrician.
The other thing is it involved more than one electrician, so you wouldn't have thought it was a quick sort of job.
 
We never quite know the full picture do we. I remember quoting around ÂŁ600 for changing quite a few sockets and switches. It seemed alot, but it would have taken quite some time. Also, you know that 10% of them are going to go wrong, threads disappear on the lugs, screws snap, you need to use deeper metal back boxes etc etc. I didn't get the job.

30 hours of work at ÂŁ45 p/hour = ÂŁ1350 plus the cost of sockets/switches, plus the extra work. Could be around ÂŁ2000. I do like trying to play devils advocate. we've got to try and look at the other side, however unlikely.

It's very odd the electrician just choose to do lots of extra work, almost too odd. There are many different explanations for this. The most obvious one would be lack of effective and clear communication between customer and electrician.
Plenty jobs I do quickly spiral in cost way beyond what I first estimated . However I will never just plough on regardless and always stop and contact the customer if they are not home. AS above when you are working on a hourly rate of around ÂŁ45+ per hour the bill can spiral very very quickly...
 
I've had a few customers over the years that have a price in their head at the beginning of the job and that's it, no matter about problems arising that's all they expect to pay.

I doubt the OP will be back with any paperwork.
 
I've had a few customers over the years that have a price in their head at the beginning of the job and that's it, no matter about problems arising that's all they expect to pay.

I doubt the OP will be back with any paperwork.
The idea of contingency planning can be alien to them...
 
Thank you for the advise James. To be honest considering we originally asked him to only do a small job, change lights and socket covers, even 10 hours seems like is a lot, however I am definitely not an expert here.

I think you mentioned changes bulbs in one message then change lights. There is a difference. Are you changing a bulb or a light fixture? If you have 40 downlights then the difference between changing a bulb to a light fixture over 40 fittings will be different. Even if it’s 10/15 minutes extra to rewire the fixtures. Were the hole cut outs and new fixtures a different size, have you then got to resize all 40 plaster holes to larger ones?

Those are small details that may matter when advising on labour costs.
 

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