Electrical Subcontractors in Florida
2,666 Florida-licensed electrical subcontractors statewide. Showing the first 200 — browse by metro below to narrow. Sign in to see phone and email and invite a sub to bid on your RFQ.
Electrical subcontractors handle the power, lighting, and low-voltage systems on a project — service entrances and panels, branch wiring, fixtures, gear, and the rough-in and trim that tie a building's electrical system together. On commercial jobs they price from the plans and the electrical spec, coordinate with the mechanical and fire-alarm trades, and carry the load for inspections and permitting on their portion of the work.
What GCs ask for
When a GC sends an electrical RFQ, they're usually looking for a quote against a defined scope: the drawing set and electrical spec section, a clear inclusion and exclusion list (gear, fixtures, low-voltage, temp power, fire-alarm interconnect), and the sub's read on long-lead items like switchgear. For bid prep a GC typically wants pricing broken out enough to compare bids apples-to-apples, confirmation the sub priced to the spec book, and the sub's license and insurance on file. Site-visit-required jobs will say so up front.
Browse electrical subs by metro
Licensing in Florida
Electrical contracting in Florida is a state-licensed trade, regulated by the Electrical Contractors' Licensing Board (ECLB) under the DBPR. There are two tiers: a certified electrical contractor (license prefix EC) can work anywhere in the state, while a registered electrical contractor (ER) is limited to the local jurisdiction that issued their competency card. Both are distinct from specialty electrical licenses such as alarm-system and limited-energy contractors. Florida treats unlicensed contracting as a crime, so a GC confirming a sub's active ECLB license is doing basic bid-prep diligence — which is why every electrical sub in this directory carries its DBPR license number.
Common questions
Do electrical subcontractors in Florida need a state license?
Yes. Electrical contracting is regulated statewide by the Electrical Contractors' Licensing Board (ECLB) under the DBPR. A certified (EC) license works anywhere in Florida; a registered (ER) license is limited to the jurisdiction that issued it.
What's the difference between a certified and a registered electrical contractor?
Certified electrical contractors can take work anywhere in Florida. Registered electrical contractors can only work in the local jurisdiction that issued their competency card.
What should a GC include in an electrical RFQ?
The drawing set and electrical spec section, a scope inclusion and exclusion list, any long-lead gear, the bid deadline, and whether a site visit is required.
Can I invite an electrical sub to bid on Sunstate Trades?
Yes. GCs post an RFQ and invite matched subs by trade and service area; invited subs are notified and can submit a bid for your bid prep.
Are these electrical subs verified, and what does the badge mean?
Listings are seeded from public Florida DBPR license data, and a sub can claim its listing and upload a credential for a one-time review. The badge reflects what was reviewed: a verified state license earns License Verified — the usual path for an electrical sub — a verified certificate of insurance earns Insurance Verified, and a sub with both reviewed shows the Verified Pro umbrella.