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This contractor has a glaring pattern of shoddy workmanship and dismal follow-through. We analyzed nearly a hundred reviews and found homeowners in new builds describing the same nightmare: miswired panels, circuits that trip when you plug in a vacuum, and ribbon lights that fail within a year because connections weren't secured properly. One family's grounded wire between their well and controller box cost them $3,500 to replace. Haskins did the original electrical in their home, and they've dealt with one failure after another ever since. Workmanship scores sit at 2 out of 10, with 22 reviewers flagging defective installations. Post-sale support is even worse (1.5 out of 10, 26 negative mentions). When the under-cabinet lights went dark a second time, Haskins quoted $260 just to revisit their own faulty repair. Another homeowner called for help with a garage circuit they'd installed four years earlier, and the company demanded the same $260 diagnostic fee with zero discount for work they'd botched. If you're hoping for warranty honor or even basic courtesy when things go wrong, prepare to be disappointed and possibly yelled at by management.
If you're stuck with Haskins because your builder chose them, document every issue in writing and budget for a second electrician to fix their mistakes. If you have any choice in the matter, hire someone else.
Timothy M. called Haskins after the under‑cabinet LED ribbon lights in his Vistoso Trails home (built in 2021) stopped working. The company returned about a year ago and repaired the lights under warranty — or so he believed — but the strips failed again this spring. He discovered Haskins considers the issue out of warranty as of May, and when he asked them to revisit what he suspects was a loose connection left unresolved the first time, they quoted $260 plus materials for the fix. He declined and said he'd look elsewhere, walking away frustrated and feeling the charge was a rip‑off. The takeaway that stuck with him: a previous warranty repair turned into a paid call for what he thinks was the same unresolved problem.
Barbara Leiber-Klotz hired the company to handle all electrical work on a newly built home and moved in February 2015. She encountered one problem after another: circuit breakers tripping whenever a vacuum was plugged in, lights that flickered, and other intermittent faults throughout the house. The latest incident was a grounded wire between the well and the controller box that shorted out the controller, forcing a replacement that cost $3,500. After years of recurring faults and that costly controller failure, she considered even one star too generous — the $3,500 repair is the concrete detail she wants other buyers to remember.
Chris H. sought warranty service and discovered the company refused to honor its warranties while delivering hostile customer support. He singled out Andrew, the general manager, who degraded him and then yelled at him—apparently upset by the way Chris spoke. The interaction convinced him the company acted unprofessionally, leaving a warranty claim unresolved and a confrontational exchange with the GM as the lasting impression.
Passed screening
Passed screening
Among the longest-standing installers in the market.
Not BBB rated.
Reviews were posted naturally over time.
Timothy M. called Haskins after the under‑cabinet LED ribbon lights in his Vistoso Trails home (built in 2021) stopped working. The company returned about a year ago and repaired the lights under warranty — or so he believed — but the strips failed again this spring. He discovered Haskins considers the issue out of warranty as of May, and when he asked them to revisit what he suspects was a loose connection left unresolved the first time, they quoted $260 plus materials for the fix. He declined and said he'd look elsewhere, walking away frustrated and feeling the charge was a rip‑off. The takeaway that stuck with him: a previous warranty repair turned into a paid call for what he thinks was the same unresolved problem.
Lori B. had Haskins install the electrical system in her four-year-old KB Home, which is no longer covered by the builder’s warranty. Over the weekend she discovered the garage had lost power — which also knocked out the tankless water heater and the automatic garage-door opener — and called Haskins hoping they’d at least cut her some slack on a service call. Instead, they wanted $260 just to come out and inspect the work they originally did. She declined and called another electrician, left a one-star review, and was left most bothered by the company’s refusal to waive or reduce the diagnostic fee for an outage affecting multiple systems they had installed.
J C. needed a simple 110‑volt outlet run in his garage and, seeing a company van working on a new home nearby, walked over to ask for a quick price. A young woman who was wiring inside couldn’t give a quote and pointed him to the toll‑free number printed on the van. When he called, the line didn’t reach the company at all but played a nonstop prerecorded Medicare offer. The memorable part of the experience: a crew on site couldn’t provide even a basic estimate, and the contact number on the vehicle led to an automated ad instead of help.
Barbara Leiber-Klotz hired the company to handle all electrical work on a newly built home and moved in February 2015. She encountered one problem after another: circuit breakers tripping whenever a vacuum was plugged in, lights that flickered, and other intermittent faults throughout the house. The latest incident was a grounded wire between the well and the controller box that shorted out the controller, forcing a replacement that cost $3,500. After years of recurring faults and that costly controller failure, she considered even one star too generous — the $3,500 repair is the concrete detail she wants other buyers to remember.
Cody discovered that almost every junction box Haskins exposed failed to meet NEC box‑fill requirements—regular 4‑inch round boxes were stuffed with two modules and seven conductors. He found the Levven modules wired through the house malfunction about a third of the time and has been working to swap them all out. As he opened boxes, he ran into other shortcuts: nothing was pigtailed from lights to receptacles, a basic apprenticeship technique, so each replacement turned into a much bigger job. He also uncovered a Levven wireless module for the garbage disposal installed inside the main electrical panel. The combination of unreliable modules and apparent code violations has forced a full rework rather than a simple repair, and what sticks with him is the sloppy placement of that wireless module inside the panel.
Daniel moved into a new-construction house and immediately ran into electrical problems tied to the company's work. He discovered that plugging the dryer into an outlet tripped the breaker because the ground hadn't been connected, and several other outlets would randomly lose power and then start working again. He contacted the warranty company; a tech visit was scheduled for a Friday but the technician never showed. The company then gave conflicting accounts — telling the warranty rep that everything was fine, and later telling Daniel that crews had stopped by and no one was home — and culminated in a manager calling his wife a liar about the missed appointment. The unresolved wiring faults and the manager's accusation left them frustrated and distrustful of the company's handling of the situation.
Chris H. sought warranty service and discovered the company refused to honor its warranties while delivering hostile customer support. He singled out Andrew, the general manager, who degraded him and then yelled at him—apparently upset by the way Chris spoke. The interaction convinced him the company acted unprofessionally, leaving a warranty claim unresolved and a confrontational exchange with the GM as the lasting impression.
Tony G. ended up with a system installed through his builder and quickly felt the company treated the builder, not him, as the real customer—once construction finished, support vanished. For the past 12 months he has dealt with lights in multiple places shutting off and flickering; more than six service visits produced the same result: technicians walked away saying they didn’t have the parts to fix it and promising a reschedule call that never arrived. He watched the problem persist despite repeated promises and growing frustration. The clearest takeaway for a prospective buyer: if you value post‑handover responsiveness, this experience shows unresolved electrical issues and missed service commitments can drag on for a year.
Collin hired a residential electrician to sort out his home's panel and discovered the crew had mislabeled multiple breakers so the markings didn’t match the actual circuits. When he asked for fixes under the warranty, the company refused to honor the work. He ended up with a substandard panel job and no warranty support — the lasting detail that mattered most was the incorrect labeling combined with the company's refusal to make it right.
Long-term satisfaction for Haskins Electric drops to 1.0 ★ compared to early reviews. This decline is worse than 69% of installers we looked at.
Long-term reviews carry the most weight in our methodology because they are most representative of what you should be paying for: a system that will perform for years.