5 Safety Checks Your Electrician Won’t Volunteer
A house feels complete only when the lights come on. That first switch flick isn’t just electricity—it’s warmth, comfort, and the start of everyday life. Your home is where you rest, grow, and protect the people you love. That’s why it must be truly safe.
Real safety doesn’t come from what you see—tiles, paint, or furniture—but from what stays hidden behind the walls. The wiring in your home works quietly 24×7, carrying power, protecting appliances, and safeguarding lives. This guide explains the essentials every first-time homeowner should know, along with five critical safety checks that are rarely offered unless you ask.
Why wiring deserves your attention
Most homeowners spend weeks choosing finishes but leave wiring decisions entirely to contractors. That’s risky.
Good wiring reduces the risk of electrical fires, shocks, and appliance damage. Today’s wiring choices also determine how easily you can add ACs, induction cooktops, EV chargers, or smart devices tomorrow. And once walls are closed, fixing poor wiring means breaking plaster, dust, noise, and added cost.
Wiring is not a place to cut corners—it’s long-term protection.
- Step 1: Know the basics (no engineering degree needed)
You don’t need technical expertise, just clarity.
- Wire size (sq.mm): Determines how much load a wire can safely carry. Undersized wires overheat.
- Insulation type: FR, FRLS, and HFFR indicate how wires behave in fire, smoke, and high heat.
- Standards: ISI/BIS markings and compliance with standards like IS 17048 show that the wire has been tested for safety and performance.
Before work begins, ask your electrician to note the wire brand, size, and insulation type for lighting, power, kitchen, ACs, and heavy appliances.
The 5 safety checks your electrician won’t tell you
These simple checks help prevent shortcuts and “sab chalta hai” fixes.
1. Show me the wire brand and box
Electricians are often pressured to use cheaper wires while billing for premium ones.
Ask to see sealed wire coils before installation, take a photo of the label, and ensure one consistent brand is used across critical circuits. Many homeowners now prefer safety-focused house wires from established manufacturers, such as APAR Anushakti Fire Protekt, for residential use.
2. What wire size is used for each high-load circuit?
ACs, geysers, ovens, kitchens, and EV chargers need thicker wires and dedicated lines.
Ask for a simple list mapping appliance load to wire size and confirm heavy appliances don’t share one common line. Higher current-carrying capacity means less heating and longer life—one of the biggest differences between safe wiring and fire risk.
3. Are the wires fire-safe and low-smoke?
In electrical fires, toxic smoke causes more harm than flames.
Ask clearly if the wires are FRLS or HFFR (low-smoke, halogen-free) and ensure these are used in bedrooms, corridors, children’s rooms, and escape paths. Advanced HFFR house wires, including Anushakti Fire Protekt, significantly reduce smoke density and corrosive gases, improving evacuation time.
4. Is the wiring planned for future load?
Most homes are wired only for today’s needs.
Plan spare capacity for extra ACs, work-from-home setups, and new appliances. Ensure proper wiring near TV units, study corners, Wi-Fi routers, and parking areas. Avoid permanent extension cords—they’re unsafe and a sign of poor planning.
Wires manufactured using modern processes like e-beam (electron-beam) cross-linking retain strength at higher temperatures, helping homes stay future-ready without frequent rewiring.
5. What testing will be done before handover?
Switching on a few lights is not testing.
Ask for insulation resistance and continuity testing using proper instruments and request basic readings or a simple report. Do not accept twisted joints, taped fixes, or hidden temporary connections. High-quality house wires show more stable test results over time.
Where safer house wires make a difference
Many homeowners ask if one wire range can safely cover most home needs. Today’s safest house wires are designed not just to carry current, but to perform under stress—heat, overload, and fault conditions.
Wires like APAR Anushakti Fire Protekt combine high-purity copper conductors with HFFR insulation powered by e-beam technology, offering higher operating temperatures, better fire resistance, and lower toxic emissions. They exceed minimum standards and provide higher current-carrying capacity suited to modern homes.
In practical terms, this means fewer hot switches, less tripping, improved fire safety, and long-term peace of mind.
In summary: how to talk to your electrician
You don’t need jargon—just clarity.
Ask for branded, ISI-marked, low-smoke, halogen-free house wires (such as APAR Anushakti Fire Protekt) in key circuits. Size wiring for future load, not just today’s lights and fans. Request a simple list of wire sizes and basic testing before handover.
When informed questions meet safety-led choices, your wiring quietly does its job—year after year—so your home remains what it’s meant to be: a safe place to live, grow, and come back to.







