Trade — Electrical
Electrical Subcontractor Agreements in Florida
Electrical contracts need outlet counts and locations, service-upgrade scope, and inspection coordination nailed down. 'Wire the addition' without a count is how electrical change orders multiply.
The clauses that cause electrical disputes
XOsign checks for each of these when you turn a photo into a contract — and flags the ones that are missing before you send.
- Missing outlet/fixture count and locations.
- Unclear service-upgrade scope.
- Missing inspection coordination.
- No existing-circuit-mapping commitment.
- Unclear panel spec (manufacturer, amperage, slot count, main size).
Frequently asked questions
What should an electrical subcontract specify?
Outlet and fixture counts with locations, the panel spec (amperage, slot count), service-upgrade scope, and who coordinates inspections. The most common electrical dispute is scope creep from a vague 'wire the addition' — define the count and the locations in the contract.
XOsign is an information platform, not a law firm, and does not provide legal advice. Trade practices vary; consult a Florida construction attorney for your specific situation.
Turn your electrical proposal into a clean contract.
Snap a photo. XOsign rebuilds it with the missing clauses flagged — and bilingual signing for your crew.