Garage Wiring

Whiting Electrical Services wires garages throughout Laconia, adding outlets, lighting, and dedicated circuits for tools and equipment so your space stays bright, functional, and ready for any project you take on.

Professional Garage Wiring in Laconia

Whiting Electrical Services was built to give Laconia homeowners electrical work they can trust in every corner of their property, including the garage. We treat a garage wiring job with the same care and precision we bring to the rest of the home, because the work deserves it. Every project is led by a licensed electrician who sizes circuits correctly and installs the GFCI protection a garage requires. We never cut the corners that lead to overloaded circuits, tripped breakers, or unsafe wiring in a damp space. Our Lifetime Craftsmanship Warranty stands behind every garage we wire, because our work should serve you for many years. That same standard of work is why Mr. Beast and WillScot have trusted us with their electrical projects. Our A+ rating from the Better Business Bureau reflects years of honest pricing and clean, dependable workmanship. We extend a ten percent discount to veterans, first responders, and paramedics, because we value those who serve our community. As a Generac Certified Dealer and service provider, we bring real, factory backed expertise to every project we take. We explain the plan and the work in plain language, so you always understand what we are adding to your garage. Our aim on every job is a genuine five star experience from the first phone call to the final inspection. Hire us once, and you will understand why so many of your Laconia neighbors keep our number close at hand.

our Reviews

Customer Testimonials

Gregg Concord
Gregg Concord
June 3, 2026

From the first phone call to the final walkthrough, Whiting Electrical was professional, friendly, and easy to work with. They installed our generator, upgraded our panel, and even came back to answer a few small questions afterward. You can tell this is a company built on doing things the right way.

Karen Gilmer
Karen Gilmer
May 19, 2026

Brad installed a whole-home Generac generator for us right before winter, and it's already paid off during two outages. He walked us through sizing, handled everything cleanly, and explained how to maintain it. Honest, professional, and clearly cares about doing it right.

Tom Alton
Tom Alton
May 14, 2026

Brad came out to assess our home for a backup generator and gave us the most thorough walkthrough we have ever had from a contractor. He sized everything correctly the first time and stood behind his recommendations. Five stars all day

David Raymond
David Raymond
April 28, 2026

Our electrical panel was outdated and tripping constantly. Whiting Electrical assessed it, gave us a straight answer about the safety risks, and upgraded it without any pressure or upselling. Couldn't ask for a more trustworthy electrician in the Lakes Region.

Meghan Turner
Meghan Turner
April 5, 2026

We had a Level 2 EV charger installed in our garage and the whole process was smooth from estimate to finish. They checked our panel first to make sure everything was safe and up to code. Fast, friendly, and fairly priced.

Steven Pilmen
Steven Pilmen
March 10, 2026

As a veteran-owned business myself, I appreciated working with a company that operates with real integrity. They handled the commercial wiring for our shop efficiently and kept downtime to a minimum. Highly recommend for any business in the area.

Linda Conchlin
Linda Conchlin
January 14, 2026

Reliable, dependable, and honest — exactly what you want when it comes to electrical work in your home. The lifetime craftsmanship warranty gave us real peace of mind. We'll be using Whiting Electrical for everything going forward.

Where We Offer Garage Wiring Services

Whiting Electrical Services provides garage wiring throughout Laconia and the surrounding Lakes Region, within roughly a 35 mile radius. If your town is nearby and not listed below, give us a call to confirm coverage:

Interested In Financing Your Garage Wiring Service? We’ve Got You Covered

Garage Wiring Service

Garage wiring turns a garage from a simple parking spot into a functional, well powered, and genuinely useful space for everything that you do there throughout the year. A properly wired garage has all of the outlets, the bright lighting, and the dedicated circuits needed for power tools, equipment, an EV charger, and so much more. Many older garages were originally wired with just a single overhead light and one lonely outlet, which falls far short of how people actually use these spaces today. Whiting Electrical Services wires garages of every kind for Laconia homeowners, whether the garage is attached or detached, brand new or simply in need of a serious upgrade. We carefully plan out the circuits, run all of the new wiring, and install the outlets and the lighting needed to make your garage genuinely useful. We do all of this work fully to the current code, with the GFCI protection and the proper dedicated circuits that a modern, hardworking garage truly requires. Our goal is always a garage that has all of the power you need exactly where you need it, delivered both safely and reliably for many years. A well wired garage can finally become a real workshop, a useful storage space, an EV charging station, or whatever else you happen to need it to be.

Adequate outlets are the true foundation of a functional garage, and most older garages have far too few of them. A typical older garage might have only a single outlet or two, which simply cannot support the way that most people use the space today. Power tools, battery chargers, a second refrigerator or freezer, and all kinds of other equipment all need their own convenient places to plug in. Running long extension cords back and forth across a garage just to reach one single outlet is both very inconvenient and, over time, genuinely unsafe. We install plenty of outlets all the way around the garage so that power is readily available wherever you happen to need it most. We carefully place those outlets at convenient heights for a workbench, for larger equipment, and for general everyday use around the space. We also add enough separate circuits so that the outlets can actually carry the real electrical loads that you will put on them. Plenty of well placed outlets make a garage far more functional, far more convenient, and genuinely much safer to use day to day.

Proper lighting completely transforms a garage from a dim, frustrating, hard to use space into a bright and workable one. Many older garages have just a single dim fixture hanging overhead that leaves the entire space poorly lit for any kind of real work. Good garage lighting means bright, even, and consistent illumination spread evenly across the entire space from one wall to the other. We install quality lighting that finally eliminates the dark corners and the deep shadows that make working in a garage so frustrating. Modern LED fixtures provide bright, clean, energy efficient light that lasts for many years with very little maintenance ever needed. We can also add light switches at convenient locations so that controlling the lighting is always quick and easy. For a dedicated workshop or workbench area, we can also add focused task lighting precisely where you happen to need it the very most. Bright, well planned, and energy efficient lighting makes any garage noticeably safer and far more pleasant to actually work in for hours.

Dedicated circuits for tools and equipment are very often essential in any real working garage or home workshop. Heavy power tools, such as a table saw, an air compressor, a dust collector, or a welder, all draw significant electrical current when running. These demanding tools need their own dedicated circuits so that they do not constantly trip the breaker or overload the shared circuits. Some of the larger and more powerful tools require full two hundred forty volt circuits, similar to those that power major home appliances. We carefully assess the specific tools and equipment that you use most often and then plan the circuits to fully support all of them. We then install dedicated circuits that are sized correctly and precisely for the specific loads that they will be carrying. For a serious home workshop, the right circuits make all the difference between constant frustration and smooth, easy operation. Planning the circuits carefully around your actual tools and equipment ensures the garage can always do exactly what you need it to do.

GFCI protection is a critical safety requirement for garage outlets under the current National Electrical Code. Garages are considered damp locations under the code, and the code specifically requires GFCI protection for nearly all of the outlets in these spaces. A GFCI device cuts the power instantly the very moment it senses any current leaking to ground, which prevents a dangerous and possibly fatal shock. This protection is especially important in a garage, where moisture, bare concrete floors, and grounded metal tools are all very common. We always install the proper GFCI protection on the garage outlets exactly and precisely as the current electrical code requires. We use either dedicated GFCI outlets or GFCI breakers in the panel to provide all of the required shock protection. This keeps you and your family safe when using tools and equipment in the sometimes cold and damp garage environment. Proper GFCI protection in a garage is never optional under the code; it is absolutely essential to a genuinely safe working space.

A subpanel is very often the smart and practical solution for a garage that needs many separate circuits. Running many individual circuits all the way from the main panel out to the garage would mean many long and separate wire runs. Instead, a single feeder can run out to one subpanel located right in the garage, with all of the individual circuits then branching out from there. This approach is cleaner, far more efficient, and much easier to expand on later than many separate individual home runs back to the main panel. A subpanel is especially useful and convenient for a detached garage or for any serious, heavily used home workshop. It provides one convenient local point to manage all of the garage circuits together in a single, accessible place. We carefully size both the feeder and the subpanel itself for the full electrical loads that the garage will eventually carry. For a heavily used garage or workshop, a properly sized subpanel is very often the best possible foundation for all of its wiring.

Safety and strict code compliance guide every single garage wiring job that we perform for our customers. We always plan the circuits out carefully to fully support the way that you actually use your garage on a daily basis. We always install the proper GFCI protection that the current code requires for all garage outlets. We size the circuits and any subpanel correctly and carefully for the real electrical loads that they will be carrying. We pull all of the permits that the work properly requires, and we schedule the inspections that independently confirm it is correct. We always use the correct wiring methods and quality materials that are suited for the garage environment and its conditions. We test every single circuit thoroughly and carefully before we ever consider the work to be truly complete and safe. A garage that is wired right the first time gives you safe, reliable, and dependable power for whatever you choose to use the space for.

Why You Should Hire a Licensed Electrician for Garage Wiring

Garage wiring involves specific code requirements and safety concerns that call for a licensed electrician. A pro knows that garage outlets require GFCI protection and installs it correctly. That protection is essential in a damp garage where the shock risk is higher. A licensed electrician sizes the circuits correctly for the tools and equipment you use. They know how to add dedicated circuits and two hundred forty volt circuits for heavy tools. A pro performs the load calculation to confirm your service can support the new garage circuits. For a detached garage, they handle the feeder, the grounding electrode, and the subpanel correctly. The work involves running wire and connecting circuits, which carries a real risk of shock. A trained electrician manages that risk and makes every connection to specification. They use the correct wiring methods and materials for the garage environment. Permits and inspections are required for garage wiring, and a licensed contractor handles both. That documentation protects you at resale and confirms the work meets current code. A licensed contractor also carries insurance and backs the work with a warranty for your protection.

Commonly Asked Garage Wiring Questions

A well wired garage needs adequate outlets, proper lighting, the right circuits, and code-required GFCI protection. Below are the questions Laconia homeowners ask us most about garage wiring, answered in clear and plain terms.

Garage wiring covers all the electrical work that makes a garage functional and safe. It includes installing outlets around the garage for tools, equipment, and general use. It covers adding bright, even lighting to make the space workable for any task. It includes dedicated circuits for heavy tools that need their own power. It covers GFCI protection on outlets as the code requires for a garage. It can include a subpanel to manage many circuits in a heavily used garage. It also covers wiring for an EV charger if you want to charge a vehicle there. So garage wiring spans everything from a few outlets to a complete workshop setup.

The specific scope depends on how you plan to use your garage. A garage used mainly for parking and storage needs adequate outlets and good lighting. A garage that doubles as a workshop needs dedicated circuits for power tools. A garage with heavy equipment may need two hundred forty volt circuits for larger tools. A garage where you charge an EV needs a dedicated charger circuit. We plan the wiring around your actual needs rather than a one size fits all approach. We discuss how you use the space so the wiring truly fits. This tailored approach ensures the garage has exactly the power you need.

Every garage wiring job follows the code and prioritizes safety. We install the GFCI protection that the code requires for garage outlets. We size every circuit correctly for the loads it will carry. We use the correct wiring methods and materials for the garage environment. We confirm your panel has capacity for the new garage circuits or add a subpanel. We pull permits and schedule inspections where the work requires them. We test every circuit before we consider the work complete and safe. Call us and we will plan and install the right wiring for your garage.

The number of circuits a garage needs depends on how you use the space. A basic garage for parking and light use needs at least a couple of circuits. One circuit typically serves the lighting so it stays on if an outlet circuit trips. Another circuit or two serves the general outlets around the garage. A garage used as a workshop needs more circuits to support the tools you use. Heavy tools often need their own dedicated circuits to avoid overloading shared ones. So the answer ranges from a few circuits for basic use to many for a workshop. We plan the circuit count around your specific needs and equipment.

Certain uses call for dedicated circuits beyond the general garage circuits. A table saw, air compressor, or welder each may need its own dedicated circuit. A refrigerator or freezer in the garage benefits from a dedicated circuit. An EV charger requires its own dedicated circuit sized for the charger. A workbench area benefits from several outlets on adequate circuits for tools. We assess the tools and equipment you use to determine the dedicated circuits needed. We size each circuit correctly for the load it will carry. This planning ensures every tool and device has the power it needs.

For a garage with many circuits, a subpanel is often the right approach. A subpanel provides a local set of breakers for all the garage circuits. It is cleaner and more practical than running many circuits from the main panel. We size the subpanel and its feeder for the total load of the garage. We confirm the main panel can support the new garage load before adding it. If the service is near its limit, we discuss the right solution with you. We plan the circuits and any subpanel to fit your current and future needs. Call us and we will determine the right number of circuits for your garage.

Yes, garage outlets are required to have GFCI protection under the current electrical code. A garage is considered a damp location, where the risk of shock is higher than in living spaces. The code requires GFCI protection for outlets in these damp and potentially wet areas. A GFCI device monitors the current and cuts power instantly if it detects a leak. That leak is what causes a dangerous shock, and the GFCI prevents it quickly. So GFCI protection in a garage is a code requirement, not an optional upgrade. This protection is especially important given the moisture and metal tools common in a garage. We always install the required GFCI protection on garage outlets.

Understanding why this matters helps explain the requirement. Garages have concrete floors, which provide a good path to ground for current. Moisture from vehicles, weather, and humidity is common in a garage. Metal tools and equipment can become a shock path if a fault occurs. These conditions make a garage more dangerous than a dry living space. A GFCI cuts power before a shock can become serious or fatal. This is exactly the kind of hazard the GFCI requirement is designed to prevent. So the code requires this protection specifically because of the garage environment.

There are different ways to provide the required GFCI protection. A GFCI outlet provides protection at that outlet and can protect others downstream. A GFCI breaker in the panel protects the entire circuit it serves. We choose the method that best fits the garage wiring and your needs. We make sure every outlet that requires protection actually has it. We test the GFCI protection to confirm it works correctly before we finish. We explain how the protection works and how to test it yourself. This keeps you safe whenever you use the outlets in your garage. Call us and we will make sure your garage outlets have the required GFCI protection.

Yes, wiring a detached garage is a common job that we handle regularly. A detached garage needs power brought to it from the main house. This usually involves running a feeder from the main panel to a subpanel in the garage. The feeder is most often run underground between the house and the detached garage. From the subpanel, circuits branch out to serve the garage’s outlets, lights, and equipment. This approach gives the detached garage its own breakers and a local point of control. So a detached garage can have the same functional wiring as an attached one. We plan and install the wiring to make your detached garage fully functional.

Wiring a detached garage involves specific requirements that we handle carefully. The feeder to a detached garage is usually run underground in conduit or as buried cable. An underground feeder requires the correct wire type, burial depth, and protection. The detached garage needs its own grounding electrode system, usually ground rods. The subpanel keeps its neutral and ground separate, as the code requires for a subpanel. A disconnect may be required at the detached garage depending on the situation. We address all of these requirements so the garage gets safe, compliant power. This is exactly the kind of work that requires a licensed electrician.

There are practical considerations when wiring a detached garage. We assess how much power the garage needs based on how you will use it. A garage with a workshop needs more capacity than one used for storage. We size the feeder and subpanel to match the garage’s real and future needs. We plan the feeder path to minimize the trenching and disturbance to your yard. We confirm the main panel can support the new feeder and load. If the service is too small, we discuss whether an upgrade is needed first. We handle the permit and inspection for the detached garage wiring. Call us and we will plan and install safe, reliable power for your detached garage.

Whether your garage should have its own subpanel depends on how many circuits it needs. A garage with just a few circuits can often be served from the main panel. A garage with many circuits benefits greatly from its own subpanel. The subpanel provides a local set of breakers rather than running many circuits to the main panel. So the more circuits your garage needs, the more a subpanel makes sense. A subpanel is also the practical solution for a detached garage. We help you decide based on your garage’s circuit needs and layout. Understanding the benefits helps you make the right choice.

A subpanel offers several clear advantages for a garage. It provides a local point to manage all the garage circuits in one place. It avoids running many long individual circuits back to the main panel. It makes adding circuits in the future much simpler and cleaner. It is often necessary when the main panel does not have room for many new circuits. For a workshop with heavy tools, a subpanel provides the capacity and slots needed. A subpanel is essentially required for a detached garage to be wired practically. So for a heavily used garage, a subpanel is often the best foundation.

There are situations where a subpanel may not be necessary. A garage that needs only a couple of circuits can be served from the main panel. If the main panel has plenty of room, adding a few circuits directly is fine. A garage used mainly for parking and light use may not need a subpanel. We assess your garage’s needs and your main panel’s capacity to advise you. We recommend a subpanel when it genuinely makes sense for your situation. We never add a subpanel you do not need just to increase the job. The goal is the right solution for how you actually use your garage. Call us and we will help you decide whether your garage needs a subpanel.

The cost to wire a garage depends on the scope of the work involved. A basic job with a few outlets and lighting costs less than a full workshop setup. The number of circuits, outlets, and fixtures affects the overall cost. Adding dedicated circuits for heavy tools increases the scope and the price. A subpanel adds to the cost but is often worthwhile for a heavily used garage. Wiring a detached garage costs more due to the feeder and grounding involved. The accessibility of the garage and the wiring paths affects the labor. We provide a clear quote after assessing your garage, so the cost is never a surprise.

Several specific factors shape the final cost of garage wiring. An attached garage with easy access costs less than a detached one. A detached garage requires an underground feeder, which adds material and labor. Running wire through finished walls takes more time than open framing. Adding two hundred forty volt circuits for heavy tools adds to the scope. Installing a subpanel adds cost but provides capacity and convenience. We explain each of these factors so you understand what is driving the price. Our veteran, first responder, and paramedic discount applies to garage wiring as well.

It helps to view garage wiring as an investment in the usefulness of the space. A well wired garage becomes far more functional for work, storage, or charging. The cost reflects safe, code compliant work that protects your home and family. Proper wiring with adequate circuits prevents the overloads that cause problems. A garage with good wiring also adds appeal and value to your home. We can plan the wiring in stages if you want to spread the work over time. We focus on a safe, functional installation rather than the cheapest shortcut. Call us for an honest assessment and a clear quote on wiring your garage.

Yes, adding a two hundred forty volt circuit in a garage is a common job we handle. Many garage tools and pieces of equipment require two hundred forty volt power. A table saw, an air compressor, a welder, or a car lift may all need it. An EV charger also uses a two hundred forty volt circuit for fast charging. We install these circuits to provide the higher voltage these tools and devices need. The circuit includes a breaker and wiring sized for the specific equipment it serves. So if your garage equipment needs two hundred forty volts, we can provide it. We size and install the circuit correctly for safe, reliable operation.

Installing a two hundred forty volt circuit involves specific considerations. The circuit must be sized for the load the equipment draws. The breaker and wire are matched to that load for safety. The right outlet or hardwired connection depends on the equipment. We confirm your panel has room and capacity for the new circuit. If the panel is full, a subpanel or additional capacity may be needed. We perform a load calculation to confirm the service can support the new load. This planning ensures the circuit is both safe and adequate for your equipment.

We handle the full installation of a two hundred forty volt garage circuit. We run the wiring from the panel to the equipment location along a safe path. We install the correctly sized breaker and the appropriate outlet or connection. We confirm the circuit is sized properly for the specific tool or device. We test the circuit and confirm it works before we finish the job. We pull the permit and schedule the inspection where the work requires it. We explain the circuit and how to use it safely with your equipment. Call us and we will add the two hundred forty volt circuit your garage equipment needs.

The time to wire a garage depends on the scope of the work involved. A basic job with a few outlets and lighting can often be done in a day. A full workshop setup with many circuits takes longer to complete. Adding dedicated circuits and a subpanel extends the timeline. Wiring a detached garage takes longer due to the feeder run and grounding. The accessibility of the garage and the wiring paths affects how quickly the work goes. We give you a realistic time estimate once we understand the scope of your project. Most garage wiring jobs are completed within a day or two.

Several factors can extend the time a garage wiring job takes. A detached garage requires trenching and running an underground feeder, which adds time. Running wire through finished walls takes longer than working with open framing. Installing a subpanel adds time but provides capacity for the garage. Adding multiple dedicated and two hundred forty volt circuits increases the work. If the main panel needs an upgrade first, that adds to the timeline. We plan the work to be efficient while maintaining every safety standard. We keep you informed about the timeline throughout the project.

We work to make the garage wiring smooth and to complete it efficiently. We arrive prepared with the right materials so the work proceeds without delays. We work safely in the panel and run the wiring cleanly through the garage. We install the outlets, lighting, and circuits to specification and to code. We test every circuit and confirm it works before we finish the job. We pull the permit and coordinate the inspection where required. We clean up the work area and leave your garage neat when we are done. Call us and we will tell you what your specific garage wiring should reasonably take.

Get Your Garage Wiring Done Right the First Time

When you want your garage wired for tools, lighting, an EV charger, or a full workshop, Whiting Electrical Services will do it safely and to code. Call us at (603) 512-3887 and let our licensed electricians power your garage the right way the first time.