Discuss Job quotes vs DIY Part P Notification Requirements for bathrooms in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Reaction score
21
Hello everyone,

I hope nobody minds that my first post is a question. We have a bit of a situation brewing at home with regards to our new shower room. We had an electrician scheduled to come as part of the bathroom installation, but he had to give backword. As the electrics are now holding up the overall project, I contacted a couple of other local pro's, who returned quotes which I found to be rather high, so I am considering doing the work myself.

The work involves replacing 3 switches, installing 3 or 4 LED downlights and drivers replacing halogen, one extractor fan off a fused spur (existing), a single shaver socket replacement and thats about it. Most of the wiring is already in place and is suitable according my what I can understand from the regs. The quotes came in at £880+VAT and £420+VAT, labour and cable only. To me, that suggests they simply didn't want the job, or am I out of touch with rates?

Can I do this myself? I have the knowledge to do it properly (I believe) but the sticking point is that it is in a "special area" according to Part P. That is to say, one of the downlights will be within 600mm of the showerhead. The fittings are IP44 rated but I plan to replace the closest fitting with an IP65/7 once I can locate a suitable matching fitting. I believe IP44 is compliant, as a minimum.

If I go ahead and do this myself, can I notify building control to get an inspection certificate or am I putting myself in a difficult position, legally speaking for when we eventually come to sell the house?

I'm not penny pinching, but the quotes seemed so extreme, that I at least have to consider the option of a DIY install. Electrical installs, along with gas, are an area of DIY where I'm extremely cautious, because if I had gaps in my knowledge, I wouldn't be aware of them.

I have another chap coming next week who's NICEIC and depending on his price he might end up doing it, but I just want to backstop the whole thing, if that makes sense.

I'd appreciate any feedback on the above if anyone has time.

Thank you.
 
Hello everyone,

I hope nobody minds that my first post is a question. We have a bit of a situation brewing at home with regards to our new shower room. We had an electrician scheduled to come as part of the bathroom installation, but he had to give backword. As the electrics are now holding up the overall project, I contacted a couple of other local pro's, who returned quotes which I found to be rather high, so I am considering doing the work myself.

The work involves replacing 3 switches, installing 3 or 4 LED downlights and drivers replacing halogen, one extractor fan off a fused spur (existing), a single shaver socket replacement and thats about it. Most of the wiring is already in place and is suitable according my what I can understand from the regs. The quotes came in at £880+VAT and £420+VAT, labour and cable only. To me, that suggests they simply didn't want the job, or am I out of touch with rates?

Can I do this myself? I have the knowledge to do it properly (I believe) but the sticking point is that it is in a "special area" according to Part P. That is to say, one of the downlights will be within 600mm of the showerhead. The fittings are IP44 rated but I plan to replace the closest fitting with an IP65/7 once I can locate a suitable matching fitting. I believe IP44 is compliant, as a minimum.

If I go ahead and do this myself, can I notify building control to get an inspection certificate or am I putting myself in a difficult position, legally speaking for when we eventually come to sell the house?

I'm not penny pinching, but the quotes seemed so extreme, that I at least have to consider the option of a DIY install. Electrical installs, along with gas, are an area of DIY where I'm extremely cautious, because if I had gaps in my knowledge, I wouldn't be aware of them.

I have another chap coming next week who's NICEIC and depending on his price he might end up doing it, but I just want to backstop the whole thing, if that makes sense.

I'd appreciate any feedback on the above if anyone has time.

Thank you.

Its impossible to know if the quotes given are reasonable as it would depend on the scope of the work and the area you are in.. £420+VAT does not seem unreasonable, it will likely take multiple visits...

If the work required building regs certifications, this can be done through the council, my council charges £450 for the privilege, which will put your quotes into perspective.. However electrics just like gas can kill, especially in a bathroom so it is wise to get a professional..

You could try looking for more one man band type electricians that are not VAT registered, running an electrical business with potentially multiple electricians is very expensive, one man band types tend to have lower overheads so along with not having to pay VAT it will likely be cheaper. £70 +VAT per hour for VAT registered companies is probably about the average £40-£45 per hour for one man band is about average..

Cost of tools, insurance, van, fuel and materials have all sky rocketed in the last year or so.. I don't think its a case of they don't want the work I think it just reflects these costs..
 
Its impossible to know if the quotes given are reasonable as it would depend on the scope of the work and the area you are in.. £420+VAT does not seem unreasonable, it will likely take multiple visits...

If the work required building regs certifications, this can be done through the council, my council charges £450 for the privilege, which will put your quotes into perspective.. However electrics just like gas can kill, especially in a bathroom so it is wise to get a professional..

You could try looking for more one man band type electricians that are not VAT registered, running an electrical business with potentially multiple electricians is very expensive, one man band types tend to have lower overheads so along with not having to pay VAT it will likely be cheaper. £70 +VAT per hour for VAT registered companies is probably about the average £40-£45 per hour for one man band is about average..

Cost of tools, insurance, van, fuel and materials have all sky rocketed in the last year or so.. I don't think its a case of they don't want the work I think it just reflects these costs..

Thanks for your reply. I forgot to say, we did specify that the work would be taken to 1st fix only in terms of scope so I'm not sure why it would require multiple days of work? All the people approached were one man bands rather than larger companies. Area is semi rural north of England, not a rich area, just normal working class folks like me.

I thought I had defined the scope of works in my original post. If I may ask, is there anything I'm missing in terms of detailing the job from an electricians point of view? It would be useful to know in terms of assessing the quotes we have received.

Certainly feeling the cost increases in the past year too, so that I can very much appreciate.
 
Hello everyone,

I hope nobody minds that my first post is a question. We have a bit of a situation brewing at home with regards to our new shower room. We had an electrician scheduled to come as part of the bathroom installation, but he had to give backword. As the electrics are now holding up the overall project, I contacted a couple of other local pro's, who returned quotes which I found to be rather high, so I am considering doing the work myself.

The work involves replacing 3 switches, installing 3 or 4 LED downlights and drivers replacing halogen, one extractor fan off a fused spur (existing), a single shaver socket replacement and thats about it. Most of the wiring is already in place and is suitable according my what I can understand from the regs. The quotes came in at £880+VAT and £420+VAT, labour and cable only. To me, that suggests they simply didn't want the job, or am I out of touch with rates?

Can I do this myself? I have the knowledge to do it properly (I believe) but the sticking point is that it is in a "special area" according to Part P. That is to say, one of the downlights will be within 600mm of the showerhead. The fittings are IP44 rated but I plan to replace the closest fitting with an IP65/7 once I can locate a suitable matching fitting. I believe IP44 is compliant, as a minimum.

If I go ahead and do this myself, can I notify building control to get an inspection certificate or am I putting myself in a difficult position, legally speaking for when we eventually come to sell the house?

I'm not penny pinching, but the quotes seemed so extreme, that I at least have to consider the option of a DIY install. Electrical installs, along with gas, are an area of DIY where I'm extremely cautious, because if I had gaps in my knowledge, I wouldn't be aware of them.

I have another chap coming next week who's NICEIC and depending on his price he might end up doing it, but I just want to backstop the whole thing, if that makes sense.

I'd appreciate any feedback on the above if anyone has time.

Thank you.
There's nothing stopping you from notifying building control and then doing the work yourself.

Sounds like a days work if new cable has to be pulled and it's hard to give true figures without seeing how difficult the layout is/how accessible the wiring might be, but bare in mind you're likely looking at £250-400 a day for a qualified electrician and £80-200 per day for a mate, it's about right price-wise.

I asked for two local 'Mr Clear-It' man and tipper companies to quote me last week to remove 5 kitchen units, 6 meters of worktop and 8 kitchen unit doors from my front garden and I had two quotes of £295+VAT and £195+VAT. It took me 3 hours to clear it into my estate and take it to the local tip on my own, lobbing it into a flatbed would have taken me literally 10 minutes.

The last time my wife got her hair cut, it cost me £180 and she was only in there an hour.

Just bare in mind electricians are highly qualified and it costs a lot of money and takes a lot of training to get the knowledge, experience and equipment necessary to carry out the job. A good electrician is worth what he charges.
 
Just bare in mind electricians are highly qualified and it costs a lot of money and takes a lot of training to get the knowledge, experience and equipment necessary to carry out the job. A good electrician is worth what he charges.

I understand. I truly do. Operating costs nowadays are extremely high and it has to be reflected in the rates charged. Insurance alone, as a chartered professional myself (non electrical obviously), I think I paid out somewhere in the region of £6k this year. It's not chicken feed anymore, if it ever was.

Your wifes hair at £180, well, that just makes me want to buy you a pint!

All the wiring is completely exposed. We're at 1st fix, so open studwork, no plasterboard, theres no chasing to be done, nothing complicated at all and all manufacturer supplied kit. 2nd fix we would take care of ourselves.

I'll look into building control notification options, appreciate the tip.

I'm not entirely sure I understand the purpose of Part P at all, either the work is compliant or it isn't, surely? It's not something I've really dealt with before, but I noticed a lot of plumbers seem to have it.
 
I understand. I truly do. Operating costs nowadays are extremely high and it has to be reflected in the rates charged. Insurance alone, as a chartered professional myself (non electrical obviously), I think I paid out somewhere in the region of £6k this year. It's not chicken feed anymore, if it ever was.

Your wifes hair at £180, well, that just makes me want to buy you a pint!

All the wiring is completely exposed. We're at 1st fix, so open studwork, no plasterboard, theres no chasing to be done, nothing complicated at all and all manufacturer supplied kit. 2nd fix we would take care of ourselves.

I'll look into building control notification options, appreciate the tip.

I'm not entirely sure I understand the purpose of Part P at all, either the work is compliant or it isn't, surely? It's not something I've really dealt with before, but I noticed a lot of plumbers seem to have it.
Ok if it's all open and you just want cables putting in then it's half a days work.

Bare in mind though that any spark worth his salt will do some testing too so that adds to the cost, and it looks like you want around 9 points doing, and a lot of people charge per point. Can be anywhere from £30-£75 per point on average from what i've seen so those prices you were quoted seem about right.

It's looks dear for what it is i agree but when you break it down it's not actually that bad.

The problem with electrics is it looks like not much has changed and so people can't understand why it costs so much.

You can put a hole in the wall for an extension, or get some kitchen units put in, or your central heating to start working again, it's a tangible difference and people don't mind paying for it. With electric though, everything 'looks like it works' and then you change a consumer unit or swap some lights out and you just have what you had before on the surface of it and so people complain about the cost!

I will probably go against the grain on here and say there's nothing difficult about what you want to do and you could easily do it yourself if you do your research prior and do some thorough swatting up on the science and principles behind circuits and the big do's and don'ts. However i would still get someone in to test before you work, because things might not be what they seem electrically with the existing circuitry.

Remember though that if you want to go 'by the book' you'll have to notify building control and that'll be another huge fee on top which makes doing it yourself economically unviable. Just better to get a spark in to do it.
 
I'm not running my business any more, as I couldn't make enough money to exist.

I did mainly kitchens and bathrooms. I think my quotes to do bathrooms, which was typically a few lights, extractor fan etc was about £400-500, including materials. You quote for £420 + vat, labour only is quite reasonable IMO.

I wasn't vat registered, as said try someone who isn't.

Apart from working for nothing, one of the other reasons I packed in, was the nightmare messes I had to clean up, was diy bodges, that you typically find in pervious kitchen & bathroom refurbs, no offence meant.

Just spent the last two weekends decorating my kitchen & utility room. Son said, why not use his painter next time, pay a few hundred quid, and enjoy the weekend sun. He has a point.
 

Reply to Job quotes vs DIY Part P Notification Requirements for bathrooms in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

Hi all, Got an awkward bathroom fan installation in a downstairs flat, concrete ceilings and (some) walls. Bathroom is already fully tiled and...
Replies
1
Views
638
I need your help please once again in tracing a fault. Am DIY but not clueless. Converting former kitchen into 2 rooms: bathroom and laundry. The...
Replies
24
Views
2K
Hello everyone. I am looking at gaining electrical qualifications in order to do installations and self certify ect. My background is...
Replies
3
Views
677
Hello. I'll apologize to start with as due to my lack of knowledge on the matter I'm likely to waffle a bit and call everything by the wrong name...
Replies
16
Views
2K
Hello all, First of all I apologise if this is in the wrong forum, I figured the general forum may be the best bet :) Thank you for taking...
Replies
3
Views
579

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock