Electrical estimate template

Free electrical estimate template for contractors.

Download a simple electrical estimate template with fields for circuits, devices, wire, boxes, panel notes, permits, access, testing, and client approval. Use it as a blank starting point, then adjust every number and promise before sending it to a customer.

What this electrical template helps you capture.

The template is intentionally plain. It gives you the structure for a clear estimate without pretending to know your prices, local requirements, or business terms.

FieldDevices

Use this row to keep the electrical scope clear before a customer approves the work.

FieldWire and boxes

Use this row to keep the electrical scope clear before a customer approves the work.

FieldPanel work

Use this row to keep the electrical scope clear before a customer approves the work.

Before you send it, review the details.

Blank templates are useful when they slow you down less than writing from scratch. They still need your judgment.

IncludeClear scope.
  • Devices
  • Wire and boxes
  • Panel work
  • Permit allowance
  • Testing
Be careful ifThe job has hidden variables.

This template can get thin for panel upgrades, service changes, older wiring, permit requirements, or jobs where access and code conditions are uncertain.

Next stepUse the matching app page.

See how EstimateIn10 handles electrical estimates when a blank template starts fighting the real scope.

Need more than a blank electrical template?

EstimateIn10 turns jobsite notes into an editable estimate draft. Keep the template for simple jobs; use the app when writing the first draft is the bottleneck.

FAQ

Is this electrical estimate template free?

Yes. The PDF and Word files are free to download and use as a practical starting point. Review the scope, pricing, taxes, licensing, and local requirements before sending anything to a customer.

What should a electrical estimate include?

A useful estimate should include customer details, jobsite address, scope, line items, labor, materials, exclusions, payment terms, expiration date, and a clear approval step.

When should I use EstimateIn10 instead of a template?

Use a template for simple jobs where you already know the scope and pricing. Try EstimateIn10 when rewriting walkthrough notes into a complete estimate becomes the slow part.