Electrical work in North Bay covers a wider range of services than most people realize. The same trade that wires a bungalow on Lakeshore Drive also handles industrial motor controls and solar systems at a cabin two hours off the highway. The work changes shape depending on where you point it. If you have only ever called an electrician for a tripped breaker, this can be a bit confusing. Are residential and commercial electricians in North Bay different people? Can a regular electrician handle off-grid solar? The answers shift depending on who you ask and what the job actually needs.
Here is how the three sides of the work tend to break down for electricians in North Bay that property owners and businesses rely on.
Residential Electrical Work
This is the side most people see. Homes, cottages, garages, additions. The work runs from small fixes to full rewires of older houses with knob-and-tube still in the walls.
Common residential jobs include:
- Panel upgrades, usually from 100 amp to 200 amp service
- Whole-home rewiring in older properties
- EV charger installation, often a 240-volt circuit on a dedicated breaker
- Backup generator install and transfer switch wiring.
- New circuits for additions, basements, or detached garages
- Troubleshooting flickering lights, dead outlets, and warm breakers
Most residential work falls under the Ontario Electrical Safety Code and requires a notification to the Electrical Safety Authority. The ESA inspects the work before it goes live. Skipping that step causes trouble later, often when the house sells or when an insurance claim gets filed.
Pricing for residential jobs runs by the hour or as a flat quote. A panel upgrade in a typical North Bay home runs six to eight hours for two electricians. A rewire on an older property can stretch into a week or more, depending on access and the wall finishes.
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Commercial Electrical Work
Commercial jobs cover retail spaces, restaurants, offices, small warehouses, and tenant fit-outs. The wiring is heavier, the lighting plans are more complex, and the scheduling matters more.
A restaurant cannot lose power for three days during a busy week. A retail store cannot have an open trench across the showroom floor on a Saturday. Commercial electricians plan around the hours the business actually runs.
Typical commercial work includes:
- Lighting retrofits, often swapping fluorescent fixtures for LED panels.
- Wiring for commercial kitchens, including hood vents and gas interlocks
- Code compliance upgrades during ownership changes or renovations
- Tenant fit-outs when a new business moves into an existing space
- Sub-panel installation for added load from new equipment
Permits get more involved on the commercial side. The ESA still inspects, but the work often ties into building permits handled by the municipality. A contractor who has done this before knows how to keep the paperwork moving.
Lighting upgrades tend to pay for themselves. Natural Resources Canada has noted that LED retrofits in commercial spaces can cut lighting energy use by half or more, depending on the existing setup. The numbers vary by building, but the trend is steady.
Industrial Electrical Work
Industrial work is its own world. Mines, mills, processing plants, manufacturing floors. The voltages are higher, the equipment is heavier, and the safety stakes are real.
Motor control centres, variable frequency drives, power distribution panels, and hazardous location wiring are common scopes. So is integration work when a plant adds new equipment that needs to talk to the existing controls.
Industrial clients care about two things above all else. Safety and keeping the line running. A good industrial electrician can read drawings, work around production schedules, and shut down only what needs shutting down.
Not every electrician takes on industrial work. It requires specific training, the right insurance coverage, and field experience around high-voltage equipment. Worth asking up front whether a contractor handles industrial scopes if that is what you need.
Off-Grid and Remote Electrical Work
This side of the work has grown a lot in recent years. Cottage owners, remote outfitters, hunt camps, and First Nations communities all run into the same question. How do you get reliable power where the grid does not reach, or where the grid is unreliable enough to need a backup?
Off-grid systems usually involve some combination of:
- Solar photovoltaic panels sized to the load
- Battery storage, often lithium iron phosphate, for cold weather performance
- A charge controller and inverter sized to match.
- A backup generator for cloudy stretches in winter
- Proper grounding and disconnects per the Ontario Electrical Safety Code
The design matters more than the gear. A well-designed 4 kilowatt solar system with the right battery bank serves a cottage better than a 6 kilowatt system that was never sized for the actual usage patterns.
Wrapping Up
Many electricians will not travel for off-grid work. The drive eats the day, and the systems require knowledge that does not come up in suburban service calls. A contractor who treats remote and off-grid as core business is the one to look for.
Call 705-825-2818 or email andrew@syctr.ca to talk through a project, whether the site is in town or three hours up a logging road.




