Electricians charge anywhere from £80 to several hundred pounds for jobs that, with the right guidance, a careful homeowner can complete safely in an afternoon. This guide walks through five of the most commonly outsourced electrical tasks in UK homes — from swapping a light switch to fitting a decorative ceiling light — and explains the safe isolation steps, wiring logic, and pro tips that make each job straightforward.
All five tasks fall within the scope of work permitted for homeowners in England and Wales under Part P of the Building Regulations, provided they do not involve adding new circuits or working in special locations such as bathrooms. When in doubt, always consult a qualified electrician.
A small toolkit covers all five jobs. The Wago 221 lever connectors are optional for the first three tasks but essential for the ceiling light replacement.
The principle of safe isolation runs through every job in this guide: identify the right breaker, switch it off, verify it is dead at the point of work with a meter or tester, then proceed. A cheap voltage pen is better than nothing, but a proper non-contact voltage tester used on a known live socket first — to confirm it is reading correctly — gives much higher confidence.
Swapping a standard white plastic light switch for a metal or decorative one is one of the quickest, highest-impact upgrades you can make. The wiring is identical — you are simply moving two or three conductors from one face plate to another.
A standard UK single-gang light switch uses a twin-and-earth cable. The brown conductor is the live, going into the COM (common) terminal. A second conductor — sometimes with brown sleeving to indicate it has been re-purposed — is the switched live, sitting in L1. The bare copper earth is terminated in the metal back box.
Any metal fitting must be earthed — including metal face plates. Plastic switches connect directly to the existing back-box earth; metal ones need a separate short earth link from the box to the plate.
Replacing a standard 13-amp socket with one that has USB-A and USB-C ports built in instantly eliminates a drawer full of charging bricks. The wiring process is almost identical to changing a light switch, with one important difference: sockets on a ring circuit carry two sets of cables rather than one.
A ring-circuit socket will have two lives, two neutrals, and two earths — one incoming from the previous socket, one outgoing to the next. The third earth wire bonds the metal back box. Each pair of conductors goes into the same terminal (L, N, and E) on the face plate.
A socket tester is the easiest way to verify a circuit is dead and that the existing socket is wired correctly before you copy it. If either green light is missing before isolation, note the fault and do not copy the incorrect wiring.
This looks simple, but it is one of the most frequently done incorrectly. A wrongly wired plug is a genuine safety hazard. Getting it right takes less than ten minutes and a few small tricks that even most homeowners have not been shown.
A UK plug has three pins and three corresponding terminals: E (earth, top), N (neutral, bottom-left), and L (live, bottom-right). The fuse sits in the live circuit. Colors: green/yellow = earth, blue = neutral, brown = live.
Plugs are sold with a 13-amp fuse fitted as standard, but that is not appropriate for every appliance. Use a 3-amp fuse for lights, TVs, and fans. Use a 13-amp fuse for kettles, toasters, hair dryers, and other high-wattage appliances. Fitting an oversized fuse removes the protection the fuse is there to provide.
Intentionally leaving the earth conductor a few millimetres longer than the live and neutral is a professional habit. It means that in an accident where the cable is pulled, the live and neutral disconnect first — the earth stays connected longest, keeping the appliance chassis safe.
Wago 221 lever connectors are the biggest quality-of-life upgrade for DIY electrics. Electricians use them daily because they are fast, reusable, and safe — and there is no reason homeowners should not use them too.
Chocolate blocks (traditional screw terminal strips) require a screwdriver and careful torque — too loose and the connection is poor; too tight and you damage the conductor. They are also bulky. Push-fit connectors are quicker but can be almost impossible to release without cutting the cable, especially in tight spaces. Wago 221s use a lever that locks the conductor in on insertion and releases cleanly when you lift the lever — no cutting, no screwdriver, no guesswork.
The inline splicer variant (a narrow two-port Wago) is particularly handy for connecting two individual conductors end-to-end — for example, extending a short cable run or joining lighting cables inside a junction box without needing a larger connector.
This is the job people are most nervous about — and the one where electricians are called most often. But once you understand what each wire actually does, the task becomes logical. The complexity comes from the number of cables, not from any technical difficulty.
A standard UK ceiling rose sits on a loop-in wiring system. Inside you will typically find:
Chisel or scrape a shallow recess in the plaster if the junction box does not sit flush with the ceiling surface. You only need a few millimetres — just enough for the box to sit level so the light fitting covers it cleanly. Most decorative light fittings have a large enough canopy to hide any small recess.
Which of these five jobs are you planning to tackle first? Got a question or a tip to share? Leave it below.