Commercial Electrical Services for Owner Renovations
Targeted electrical work that supports how your business is growing and changing.Small commercial electrical projects cover a wide range of work types. Some are driven by a renovation, like a business owner refreshing a retail space, reconfiguring an office, or updating a restaurant layout. Others are driven by operational needs, such as adding circuits for new equipment, upgrading lighting to improve the customer experience, or bringing an older space up to current code.
Bronco Electric provides small project electrical services, including:
No project is too straightforward for us to take seriously, and no scope is too targeted to get our full attention. We approach every small commercial project the same way we approach a large one, with honest pricing and work that holds up to inspection.
What Business Owners Ask Us Most About Small Projects
Small commercial electrical projects are typically owner-driven improvements or operational upgrades. While they fall short of a full tenant improvement or major renovation, they still require a licensed electrician, proper permitting, and code-compliant execution.
A business owner remodeling a retail space, adding circuits for new kitchen equipment, upgrading lighting in a customer area, or reconfiguring outlets after an office layout change would all fall into this category. If it involves electrical work in a commercial space and it’s not a ground-up build, it’s likely something we can handle quickly and cleanly.
We work on a wide range of small commercial electrical projects for business owners and property owners, including:
- Retail and restaurant remodels requiring electrical reconfiguration
- Office renovations with new wall layouts, lighting, and data rough-in
- Equipment circuit additions for commercial kitchens, gyms, and medical offices
- Lighting upgrades and retrofits in customer-facing commercial spaces
- Panel and sub-panel upgrades to support operational changes
- Code compliance corrections identified during inspections or property transactions
- Outdoor and signage lighting for commercial properties
If it’s a commercial space and it needs electrical work, we can scope it and get it done.
Yes, in virtually every case. Electrical work in commercial spaces — including circuit additions, panel work, lighting installations, and wiring changes — requires a permit under California and Idaho electrical codes. The permit process exists to make sure the work is inspected and verified as safe and code-compliant, which protects the business owner, the building, and anyone who occupies the space.
Bronco Electric pulls permits and schedules inspections on every commercial project we complete, small or large, because skipping that step creates liability and problems that surface at the worst possible time.
The more context you can provide, the more useful the initial conversation will be. It helps to know the general scope of what you’re trying to accomplish, such as:
- Whether you have renovation plans or a floor plan showing layout changes
- What equipment or systems need to be powered
- Whether the project is tied to a specific timeline, like a lease commencement or a contractor schedule
You don’t need to have everything figured out; that’s part of what the site assessment is for.
Yes. Many small commercial remodel projects involve a general contractor coordinating multiple trades, and Bronco Electric is experienced working within that structure. We communicate clearly with GCs, schedule our work around the broader project sequence, and stay aligned with the renovation timeline so the electrical scope doesn’t create delays for other trades. If you have a GC already engaged on your remodel, we’re happy to work directly with them from the start.
Full-Service Electrical Expertise
From large-scale commercial and industrial construction to ongoing system support, our team delivers complete electrical solutions built around performance, safety, and long-term reliability. While we’re trusted on complex job sites, we also bring that same level of expertise to residential service work, giving homeowners access to high-level electrical knowledge typically reserved for larger projects.