Framework Advisory

Tax Planning for Electricians

Licensing costs, a truck full of tools, project-based income — electrical contracting has more tax planning upside than most electricians ever get shown.

License renewals, continuing ed, certifications — these are real business costs, but they almost never make it onto the return, because nobody's tracking them as expenses in the first place. Quarter after quarter, that adds up.

Where electricians businesses lose money, and how we fix it

  • Licensing, continuing education, and certification costs that get paid personally and never show up as deductions

    A full review of your licensing, training, and certification costs

  • Vehicle and tool expenses not cleanly separated from personal use

    A vehicle and equipment deduction strategy, including Section 179

  • No real quarterly planning — payments set once a year and forgotten

    Quarterly payments tied to what you're actually making right now

  • Entity structure that hasn't been revisited since the business was smaller

    An S-corp election review once your profit supports it

Common deductions we check for electricians

  • Licensing and certification renewals
  • Tools and equipment
  • Vehicle and mileage
  • Safety gear
  • Liability insurance
  • Continuing education
  • Retirement plan contributions
Representative Example

An electrical contractor's certifications and continuing education costs had never been tracked as deductions — a full year of those costs had been missed entirely.

Illustrative example based on common situations in this industry, not a specific named client. See a real, anonymized client result on our Results page.

Frequently asked questions

Do you work with both residential and commercial electricians?+

Yes, the underlying tax strategy — entity structure, equipment deductions, and quarterly planning — applies to both.

More general questions about pricing, process, and security? See the full FAQ.

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