A website that turns "electrician near me" into a phone call.
Describe your electrical business and the AI builds the whole thing — services, service area, license details, and a phone number that's one tap away. Free to build and preview with no credit card; you only pay to publish.
Free to build — no credit cardLive in minutesPublish from $10/mo
Design directions
Electrician website designs, generated by AI
Two directions your business could take — one residential, one commercial. Pick the one that matches your work, hit generate, and the AI builds the real site around it.
Hover to scroll
High VoltageBold & Urgent
Yellow and black you can read from across the room — a big phone number in the header, a 24/7 emergency badge, service cards, and a quote request form. Generate from this one if you work in people's homes and the emergency call pays your bills.
Steel blue and gray with a featured projects row, a credentials and compliance strip, and a bid request form written for facilities managers, not homeowners. The direction if your work comes through contracts and tenders.
When half the house is dark, nobody fills out a form. Your number sits big in the header of every page and dials with one tap on a phone — so the panicked search ends with your phone ringing, not a competitor's.
Proof you're safe to let in
You're a stranger asking to get behind someone's walls. Your license number, insurance, and real Google reviews sit where visitors can't miss them — the three things that turn "some electrician from the internet" into the one they call.
Quotes land while you're on a job
You can't answer the phone from a crawl space. A quote request form catches the panel upgrades and EV charger installs: the customer describes the job, it lands in your email, and you price it that evening.
The checklist
What an electrician website actually needs
The six things a working electrician's site has to get right — built in from the first generation.
Tap-to-call on every screen
Someone whose breakers won't reset isn't hunting for a contact page. Your number stays visible on every page and dials with one tap — because that's the search that becomes a job in the next ten minutes.
Services with honest price signals
You don't need a full price list — you need to answer "what's this going to cost me?" State your callout fee, flag free quotes on panel upgrades and EV charger installs, and say whether troubleshooting is hourly. It filters the tire-kickers before they dial.
License and insurance, in plain sight
Anyone can letter a van. Your license number and proof of insurance in the footer and on the about page is what separates you from the guy on the neighborhood app — and in many states your website counts as advertising, so the number belongs there anyway.
A service area that names the towns
A plain list of the towns you cover saves both sides the worst phone call in the trade: the one where they describe the whole fault, then give a zip code you don't serve. It also gives Google a straight answer about where you work.
Google reviews doing the vouching
Letting an electrician behind the drywall is an act of trust, and reviews are how strangers borrow it. Quote a few real ones on the site and link your Google profile — the job photos and star count finish the sale.
A quote form for the planned work
Panel upgrades, EV chargers, and rewires get researched at 9pm on the couch, not in a blackout. A short form — the job, the address, a photo of the panel if they have one — turns that evening research into a lead waiting in your inbox.
How it works
Three steps. That's it.
Step 01
Describe your business
A few sentences: your name, what you do, the towns you cover, your license. That's it — no theme shopping, nothing to configure.
Step 02
Get the full site in about a minute
Home, services, service area, about, contact — separate pages with copy and images already placed. You start from something finished and correct it, instead of staring at something blank.
Step 03
Edit by chatting, then publish
Tell it "make the phone number bigger" or "add EV charger installs to services" and it's done. When it looks right, put it live on your own domain — hosting and SSL included.
The actual prompt an electrician would type
“Build a website for Torres Electric, a father-and-son residential electrician in Fresno, California. We do panel upgrades, EV charger installation, troubleshooting, lighting, and 24/7 emergency callouts — $95 callout fee, free quotes on bigger jobs. Licensed and insured, covering Fresno and Clovis. Put the phone number big at the top of every page, with pages for services, service area, reviews, and a quote request form.”
Building costs nothing. Sign up without a credit card, describe the business, and click through every page of the finished site — your free credits cover the whole build and preview.
Going live is the Maker plan at $10/month: your own domain, hosting, SSL, quote request forms that land in your email, 100 monthly credits for updates, and SEO controls so local searches have something to find. See all plans →
Can customers request emergency callouts through the site?
They can call you through it — and for an emergency, that's the right path. The site puts your number one tap away on every page, but it doesn't dispatch anyone or promise response times, so we'd never route a live fault through a form. Keep the form for quotes and non-urgent work, and label it that way — the AI sets that up if you ask.
Is it really free to build?
Yes. A new account includes free credits to generate the full site and preview every page — no credit card asked. Paying starts only when you publish: the Maker plan is $10/month, and every plan opens with a 5-day free trial.
Can I run it on my own domain, with SSL?
Yes. Point a domain you already own at the site or register a new one, from the Maker plan up. SSL comes with every published site automatically, so browsers show the padlock instead of a warning.
Can I change my services and prices myself?
Yes, by typing. Tell the AI "the callout fee is $95 now" or "add EV charger installation to the services page" and the change is made in about a minute. No designer to chase, no invoice for a ten-word edit.
Should my license number actually be on the website?
Yes — footer and about page. In a lot of states, contractor advertising legally has to carry the license number, and your website is advertising; check your own state's rule. Compliance aside, it's the fastest trust signal you have: it tells a homeowner you're inspectable before you've said a word.