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Five questions homeowners should ask before rewiring their home

25 Jun 2026 5 min read
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Why rewiring deserves careful thought

Rewiring a home is one of the most significant electrical investments a homeowner will make. Done well, it underpins the safety and convenience of every appliance, light, and socket in the house for years to come. Done poorly or too hastily, it can create hazards that are invisible behind finished walls. Before you call a contractor or approve a quote, these five questions will help you make a more informed decision.

1. Does my home actually need a full rewire — or just targeted repairs?

Not every electrical problem demands a complete rewire. Older homes with original wiring, frequent circuit-breaker (MCB) trips, flickering lights, discoloured switch plates, or a persistent burning smell are strong signals that the wiring system deserves a thorough inspection by a licensed electrician. A qualified professional can tell you whether the problem is isolated — a single faulty circuit, a deteriorated joint, or an undersized distribution board — or whether the wiring throughout the house has aged to the point where a full replacement is the safer, more cost-effective path. Never self-diagnose on a hunch alone; get a written inspection report first.

2. What type of wire is being used, and why does that matter?

House wiring is not a commodity. The conductor material (copper versus aluminium), the insulation compound, and the overall build quality all affect how safely and reliably electricity reaches your outlets. For residential applications, copper conductors are widely preferred by electricians because copper offers good conductivity and handles repeated flexing and heat cycles well. The insulation wrapped around the conductor protects against short circuits, moisture ingress, and mechanical damage inside walls and conduits. Ask your contractor to show you the wire they plan to install and to explain the insulation type. A reputable manufacturer will print the wire specifications, including voltage grade and conductor size, directly on the outer sheath — look for that marking and ask an electrician to confirm it matches your home’s load requirements.

3. Is the wiring suitable for the electrical loads in a modern home?

Homes today carry far heavier electrical loads than they did two or three decades ago — air conditioners in multiple rooms, inverter systems, EV (electric vehicle) charging points, high-wattage kitchen appliances, and home-office equipment all draw sustained current. Wiring that was adequate for a simpler load profile may be undersized for today’s demands. Before finalising a rewiring plan, ask your electrician to calculate the anticipated load for each circuit and to size the wiring, protective devices (MCBs and RCCBs — residual current circuit breakers, which cut power if they detect a leakage to earth), and the main distribution board accordingly. Future-proofing at this stage is far cheaper than opening walls again later.

4. What happens in the event of a fire or fault inside the wall?

This question makes many homeowners uncomfortable, but it is the right one to ask. In any electrical installation, there is always a small risk of insulation breakdown, overheating, or arcing (a discharge of electricity across a gap or damaged insulation). Wires that run inside concealed conduits or cavity walls need insulation that limits the spread of fire and, ideally, produces minimal smoke and toxic gases if it does catch. Ask your contractor whether the wires they are specifying carry any fire-performance designation and what that designation means in practice. Products in APAR’s portfolio — such as those in the FireProtekt range — are designed with fire-performance characteristics in mind; consult the product datasheet and your electrician to understand whether a product’s specific ratings are appropriate for your home’s layout and local regulations. Never take a verbal claim at face value; ask to see the product markings.

5. How do I verify the contractor and the materials are both trustworthy?

Even the best cable performs poorly if it is installed carelessly, and even a skilled electrician cannot compensate for substandard materials. Here is a practical checklist before work begins:

  • Contractor credentials: Ask for a licence or registration under your state’s electrical inspectorate. In India, most states require electricians to hold a wireman’s or supervisor’s licence issued under the Indian Electricity Rules. Request references from comparable residential projects.
  • Material traceability: Ask the contractor to provide the invoice showing where the wire was purchased. Counterfeit and sub-standard wire is a genuine problem in the Indian market. Buy from authorised dealers of reputable manufacturers and check that the printing on the cable sheath — brand name, voltage grade, conductor size — is clear, consistent, and not easily rubbed off.
  • Third-party inspection: For a full rewire, consider requesting an inspection by your local Electrical Inspector before walls are closed. This is a statutory option in most states and adds an independent layer of verification.
  • Documentation: Ask for a wiring diagram and a circuit schedule (a list of which breaker controls which circuit) once the work is complete. This is invaluable for any future fault-finding or extension work.

A word on value versus cost

Rewiring quotes can vary widely. A contractor who proposes a significantly lower price is often cutting corners on wire quality, conduit grade, protective devices, or labour time. Wiring is a long-term asset; the marginal extra cost of specifying better materials is small relative to the total project cost and negligible compared to the cost of rectifying a fault later. Ask each contractor to give you a bill of materials alongside their labour quote so you can compare like for like.

Where APAR fits in

APAR Wires and Cables manufactures a range of wires intended for residential and commercial wiring applications. If you are discussing materials with your contractor, you are welcome to ask them about APAR products or visit aparwiresandcables.com to browse the residential wiring range and download product datasheets. Share the datasheets with your electrician so they can confirm the products meet the requirements of your specific installation.

This article is for general guidance only. Always engage a licensed electrician for any wiring work in your home. Specific product selection should be based on a qualified professional’s assessment of your load requirements and local regulations.

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