Most Indianapolis homeowners do not give much thought to what happens before their electrician shows up. You schedule the appointment, maybe clear a little counter space, and that is usually it. We understand that approach because life is busy. But a few minutes of preparation can genuinely change the outcome of your service call. It can speed up the job, reduce the cost, prevent a second visit, and help you get clearer answers about what is happening inside your home's electrical system.
At Zimmerman Electric, we have served Central Indiana homeowners and businesses across Marion, Hamilton, Hendricks, Boone, Johnson, Morgan, Shelby, and Hancock counties since we started. Over thousands of service calls, we have seen what separates a smooth, efficient visit from one that runs long, costs more, or requires a follow-up. The difference almost always comes down to how prepared the homeowner was. This checklist is what we wish every customer knew before we arrived.
These five steps should happen the day before or the morning of your appointment. None of them require any electrical knowledge. They are purely logistical, and they make an immediate difference.
Your main electrical panel is typically a grey or black metal box mounted on a wall, usually in the garage, basement, utility room, or an interior hallway. Know exactly where it is before we arrive. If the panel door is blocked by shelving, stored items, or furniture, clear a clear path to it. Indiana code requires 36 inches of clearance in front of any electrical panel, and your electrician will need unrestricted access the moment they walk through the door.
If your panel has a directory card on the inside door that labels each breaker, read through it. If the labels are missing or unclear, that is useful information to share with us. A poorly labeled panel is one of the most common obstacles we encounter, and knowing in advance means we can budget extra time for it rather than delaying the rest of the job.
Think about every room, closet, crawl space, attic, or outdoor area where electrical work will take place. Move furniture, rugs, stored boxes, or anything else that blocks access. Your electrician is there to diagnose and repair electrical systems, not to move your belongings, and having to stop and relocate furniture eats into the time you are paying for.
If the work involves attic access or a crawl space, make sure the access hatch is unobstructed and easy to open. Tight crawl spaces in older Indianapolis homes are notoriously cramped, and even clearing a two-foot path to the hatch saves meaningful time.
Before the appointment, walk through your home and make a written list of every electrical issue you have noticed. Include specifics: which room, how often it happens, whether it is worse at certain times of day or under certain conditions, and how long it has been going on. Common things to document include:
Sharing this list with your electrician at the start of the call allows us to prioritize the most urgent issues and plan the scope of work more accurately. It also ensures we do not miss a problem that might seem minor to you but could indicate a larger underlying issue.
If you have records from previous electrical work, panel upgrades, inspections, or permit approvals, gather those documents. Even rough notes about when work was done and by whom can be helpful context. For older homes in Indianapolis and Central Indiana, this history helps us understand the age and condition of the existing wiring, identify whether work was permitted and code-compliant, and spot any known hazards that were flagged in the past.
If you are not sure whether prior work was permitted, do not worry. We can check permit status through the city or county building department if needed.
A curious dog or cat that wanders into a work area creates real safety risks. Secure pets in a room away from the work areas before we arrive. Let everyone in the household know that electrical work is happening and that the power may be shut off to certain circuits or the entire panel for a period of time. This is especially important if anyone at home depends on electrically powered medical equipment, and something we always want to know in advance.
Beyond physical preparation, there is information your electrician genuinely needs to do the job well. Having these items ready at the start of the call means less time spent tracking things down and more time spent solving the actual problem.
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What to Have Ready |
Why It Matters |
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Address and access details |
Confirms the correct service location and entry points |
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Your written problem list |
Allows us to scope the work accurately before starting |
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Panel location and any known labeling issues |
Critical for safe lockout and circuit identification |
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Previous permit or inspection records |
Helps us understand the history and current code compliance status |
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Any appliances or devices connected to affected circuits |
Helps identify load-related issues and circuit overloads |
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HOA or building management contact (if applicable) |
Some jobs require landlord or HOA notification before work begins |
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Questions you want answered |
Maximizes the value of the visit for you as a homeowner |
One thing that is particularly useful for complex jobs, such as electrical panel upgrades or EV charger installation, is knowing the age and amperage of your current panel. If you can find that information on the panel door or in your home paperwork, share it with us upfront. It significantly shortens the assessment time and helps us give you a more accurate estimate on the spot.
A service call is also your chance to learn. Our electricians at Zimmerman Electric are here to solve your problem AND help you understand the state of your home's electrical system. Do not hesitate to ask questions. Here are the most valuable ones to have ready:
Preparation gets you to the starting line. These habits during the call itself help you get the most value from every minute of your technician's time.
Plan to be available at the home when the electrician arrives. The first five to ten minutes of a service call involve information gathering, and being present means you can answer questions in real time rather than having the technician wait or make assumptions. If you absolutely cannot be there, designate someone who knows the property well and has access to all the areas where work will happen.
Once work begins, give your electrician uninterrupted time to focus. Electrical diagnostics require concentration, particularly when tracing circuits in older homes with nonstandard or unlabeled wiring. Save your questions for natural break points unless something urgent comes up.
At the end of the call, ask for a brief verbal walkthrough of what was done, what was found, and what (if anything) should be addressed in a future visit. This is your window to understand the full picture of your home's electrical health and to prioritize any follow-up work. At Zimmerman Electric, we always leave time for this conversation.
Take a few photos of the completed work, particularly panel work, outlet replacements, or new circuit installations. This gives you a visual record that is useful for insurance purposes, future inspections, and when you bring in a new contractor years down the road.
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Zimmerman Electric Note: What Our Technicians Wish More Homeowners Knew The number one preparation mistake we see is a panel that has not been touched since the house was built and is now blocked by boxes and shelving. Circuit labeling is often absent entirely. When we arrive and cannot safely access the panel or identify circuits, it adds time and uncertainty to every step of the job. If you do nothing else before our arrival, clear the panel and take two minutes to check whether the breakers are labeled. That single step helps us more than anything else. The second most common issue is a homeowner who cannot describe when a problem started or what conditions make it worse. Electrical problems are almost always behavioral. They happen under load, at certain times of day, or when specific appliances run. The more specific you can be about the pattern, the faster we find the root cause. |
Some service calls have additional preparation steps specific to the type of work involved. Here is what to expect for the most common job categories.
A panel upgrade is a bigger job that typically takes four to eight hours and requires the power to be off for most of the day. Plan ahead by charging devices and filling a cooler if needed. Know the make and model of your existing panel if possible. Federal Pacific and Zinsco panels, both common in older Indianapolis homes, are known safety hazards that require immediate replacement when found. If you suspect you have one, tell us before the appointment so we can come prepared with the right components.
Before your EV charger installation appointment, confirm where in your garage or driveway you want the charger mounted, and whether you want a hardwired unit or a receptacle-based installation. Know your vehicle's charging requirements if possible. Most Level 2 EV chargers require a dedicated 240-volt, 50-amp circuit. We will assess your panel capacity during the estimate, but knowing your panel's amperage in advance speeds that conversation considerably.
Installation of a whole-house surge protector is a relatively fast job, typically one to two hours, but still requires panel access. This is a popular request after storm season in Central Indiana, when power surges from Duke Energy or AES Indiana can damage connected electronics and appliances. If you are scheduling this as a standalone job, the preparation is straightforward: clear the panel, be home at the start, and let us know about any sensitive electronics or equipment you specifically want protected.
For commercial electrical services, preparation involves additional coordination. Make sure the relevant areas of the building are accessible during the appointment window, that any employees or tenants in the affected area are notified of a potential temporary power outage, and that someone with building authority is available on-site to answer questions and authorize any work that falls outside the originally quoted scope. For tenant spaces, confirm that your lease or building agreement permits the planned work.
Preparation is a two-way street. You do your part as the homeowner, and we hold up our end as Indianapolis's trusted licensed electrical contractor. Here is what every Zimmerman Electric customer can expect from every service call:
We have served homeowners and businesses across eight Indiana counties, from Carmel and Fishers in Hamilton County to Greenwood and Franklin in Johnson County, and we bring the same standard of care to every zip code. Whether you are in a 1960s ranch in Marion County or a new construction in Boone County, preparation before our arrival sets both of us up for success.
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Related Questions This Article Answers
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Print or screenshot this checklist and go through it the morning of your appointment:
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Task |
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Locate your main electrical panel and clear 36 inches of access in front of it |
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Clear furniture and obstructions from all work areas |
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Write down every electrical problem you have noticed with specific details |
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Gather previous permit records, inspection reports, or contractor invoices |
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Secure pets and alert household members about the appointment |
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Confirm the panel's amperage rating if possible (100A, 200A, etc.) |
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Check whether your breakers are labeled and note any that are unclear |
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Note any appliances that may be connected to the affected circuits |
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Prepare your list of questions for the electrician |
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Have your contact number ready in case the technician needs to reach you |