24/7 Emergency Electrician in Manassas, VA

Master Electrician. 24/7 Emergency Dispatch.

Mohammad Adam is a Virginia-licensed Master Electrician with 16+ years in the trade. We dispatch 24/7 — overnight, Sundays, holidays — with a typical 45-minute response inside the Manassas service area. Call comes in, technician rolls, diagnosis before any work starts.

Mohammad Adam, Licensed Electrical Contractor, performing emergency electrician in Manassas, VA

What counts as an electrical emergency

An electrical emergency is any situation that poses an immediate risk of fire, shock, or loss of essential power in your home. Sparks from an outlet, a burning smell behind a wall, a breaker panel that’s hot to the touch, exposed wiring, water pooling near electrical equipment, or a partial power outage when your neighbors still have power — these are all active safety risks. If you see fire, smoke, or active sparking, call 911 first. Then call us. We handle the electrical side once the scene is safe.

Not every electrical issue is an emergency. A single dead outlet, lights that dim briefly when the AC kicks on, or an intermittent flicker in one room — those are worth a service call, but they can usually wait for a scheduled appointment. An emergency is when there’s an active safety risk to people in the house or when you’ve lost power entirely and the utility confirms the outage isn’t on their end. If you’re not sure which side your situation falls on, call 703-972-5571 and describe what you see — we’ll tell you straight whether it needs a truck now or a Tuesday appointment.

Mohammad Adam is a Virginia-licensed Master Electrician — the highest electrician tier the state issues — with 16+ years diagnosing residential electrical failures across Northern Virginia, DC, and Maryland. Mohammad Adam runs a maintenance team, which is what makes the 24/7 dispatch and 45-minute response time inside the Manassas service area a real operational number, not a marketing claim. Call comes in. Technician rolls. Temporary safe state first, then targeted diagnosis, then the permanent fix — scheduled or completed the same visit.

Why Manassas homeowners call us for emergency electrical service

Manassas, VA is an independent city about 30 miles southwest of Washington, D.C., where I-66 meets the Route 28 and Route 234 corridors. The city sits between the historic Manassas National Battlefield Park to the north and the Prince William County suburbs to the south, with a walkable downtown anchored by the Manassas Train Station and a growing dining and arts scene on Center Street.

Pre-1970s historic homes & mid-century ranches

Old Town Manassas, Sudley area, older blocks near downtown

Manassas’s oldest housing stock includes late-19th-century homes in the Historic Overlay District and mid-century ranches and Cape Cods from the 1950s-1960s. These homes were built with 60-100 amp panels (pre-1960) or 100-amp panels (1960s), cloth-insulated copper wiring, galvanized steel plumbing, and minimal insulation (R-13 walls at best). Many still have original fuse boxes or early breaker panels. Plumbing is typically galvanized steel supply lines running to copper at the fixtures; pipe corrosion and reduced pressure are common in unrenovated homes of this era.

Symptoms: 60-100A panels with circuits sized for 1950s-1960s loads; Federal Pacific Stab-Lok or Zinsco panels documented as fire-risk brands in some units; fuse boxes instead of breakers in unrenovated homes; cloth-insulated copper wiring with brittle insulation; overhead service drops from city utility poles; insurance carriers flagging FPE/Zinsco at renewal.

1970s-1990s colonials, split-levels & townhomes

Wellington, Signal Hill, Blooms Crossing area, inner subdivisions

The 1980s were Manassas’s biggest growth decade — about 35% of the city’s housing stock dates from this era. These homes typically have 200-amp service (the new standard by the mid-1980s), copper wiring with PVC insulation, and central AC. However, 1970s-era homes in the mix may have aluminum branch wiring (deprecated by NEC 1972 but installed through the mid-1970s) or undersized panels at 100-150 amps. GFCI protection is inconsistent — NEC 1975 required GFCIs in bathrooms only; kitchen counter receptacles weren’t required until NEC 1987. Plumbing transitioned from galvanized + copper (1970s) to all-copper and early PEX (late 1980s-1990s). Insulation improved to R-19 walls and R-30 attics by the late 1980s.

Symptoms: 100-200A panels original at construction — now 35-50 years old; some aluminum branch wiring in mid-1970s homes; GFCI coverage spotty in pre-1987 builds (NEC 1987 added kitchen counter requirements); EV charger or whole-house renovation triggers the 200A upgrade; overhead service in older areas near Sudley, underground in later subdivisions like Wellington.

2000s-2020s townhomes & newer infill

Route 28 corridor communities, Ashton Glen, newer subdivisions near city edges

About 17% of Manassas housing was built since 2000. These homes have 200-amp service, AFCI breakers (required by NEC 2008 for bedroom circuits, expanded in NEC 2014 and NEC 2020), tamper-resistant outlets (NEC 2008), and PEX plumbing. Common issues include AFCI nuisance tripping on noisy loads (by design — the breakers are sensitive), smart-home wiring done incorrectly by previous owners, and tankless water heaters or heat pumps pulling continuous high loads that strain branch circuits. Many townhomes in this era have shared walls and smaller service drops — coordination with the city’s municipal electric utility for any service-entrance work is required.

Symptoms: 200A panels standard; upgrades here are usually about adding capacity for EV chargers, heat pumps, or home additions, not safety replacement; AFCI breaker nuisance-tripping on noisy loads; smart-home wiring done incorrectly by previous owners; coordination with the city’s municipal electric utility required for any service-entrance work; HOA coordination needed in Route 28 corridor townhome communities.

Most of the emergency calls we get from Manassas trace back to the same few causes — aging panels in homes built before 1990, overloaded circuits from modern appliance loads, and storm damage to service-entrance hardware. If your home fits that profile, you already know our number.

Electrical emergencies we handle every week in Manassas

Here are the calls Mohammad gets most often from Manassas homeowners. If your situation matches one of these, call now — don’t wait.

Sparking outlet or arcing

Visible sparks, burn marks around the outlet plate, or an electrical arcing sound means something is failing inside the box — a loose connection, damaged wiring, or a worn outlet. Kill the breaker for that circuit if you can identify it safely. Don’t plug anything back in. Call us.

Burning smell from an outlet, switch, or panel

An acrid electrical burning smell with no visible fire source usually means a connection is overheating — inside a junction box, behind a switch plate, or at the breaker panel bus bar. This is the leading cause of residential electrical fires. Stop using the circuit immediately. If the smell is at the panel, call us today — we treat this as urgent.

Power out in part of the house — not a utility outage

If your neighbors still have power and part of your house is dark, the cause is inside your system — a tripped main, a failed breaker, a loose service-entrance connection, or a blown neutral. We diagnose which level the failure is at and fix it. If it’s a utility-side issue (meter base, weatherhead), we coordinate with Dominion Energy so you’re not bouncing between calls.

Breaker keeps tripping or won’t reset

A breaker that trips once is doing its job. A breaker that trips every time you reset it, or that’s hot to the touch, points to an overloaded circuit, a short downstream, or a worn breaker that’s no longer holding. Don’t tape the breaker or hold it in the ON position — that defeats the safety mechanism. We trace the circuit and find the cause.

Buzzing or humming from the panel

A low hum from a transformer is normal. A loud buzz or crackle from inside the breaker panel is not — it usually means a loose breaker connection, a failing bus bar, or arcing inside the panel. Don’t open the panel cover yourself. Call us and we’ll assess it same-day.

Hot outlet, plug, or switch plate

An outlet or switch that’s warm to the touch is a warning sign — overloaded circuit, loose wiring, or degraded contact inside the device. Unplug everything from that outlet and stop using the switch. If the heat is significant (too hot to hold your hand on), kill the breaker and call us immediately.

Electrical shock from an appliance or fixture

A tingling shock when you touch a tap, appliance, or light fixture means there’s a ground fault somewhere in the system — current is traveling a path it shouldn’t. This is a safety risk, especially in wet areas (kitchen, bathroom, laundry). We test for ground faults, identify the source, and repair the wiring.

Storm damage — fallen wires or damaged service mast

After a storm, if you see a downed line on your property, a broken service mast, or damage to the weatherhead where the utility connects to your house — stay away from the wires, call 911 if lines are on the ground, then call us. We coordinate with the utility for the service-side work and handle the house-side repairs.

Water near outlets or the electrical panel

A flood, burst pipe, or roof leak near electrical outlets or the breaker panel is a combination emergency. If you can safely reach the main breaker, kill it. Never touch wet electrical equipment. We come out, assess the water/electrical intersection, and make it safe before any restoration work begins.

What happens when you call — our emergency response process

When you call 703-972-5571 with an electrical emergency, here’s what happens.

1

Phone triage — 5 minutes

We pick up. You describe the symptoms — what you see, smell, hear. We ask about your panel location, whether you’ve been able to kill the breaker, and whether anyone was shocked or injured. If there’s an active fire or someone is injured, we tell you to call 911 first — we’re electricians, not first responders.

2

Dispatch — typically within 45 minutes

Mohammad runs a maintenance team, so there’s almost always a truck within the response radius. We give you a real ETA on the phone, not a window. If the team is already dispatched and we can’t hit 45 minutes, we say so and give you the honest timeline.

3

On-site safety check

First priority is making the scene safe — kill the right breakers, isolate the problem circuit, confirm no one is at risk. We don’t start diagnosing until the immediate danger is resolved.

4

Targeted diagnosis

We find the root cause, not just the symptom. A tripping breaker might be the breaker itself, a short downstream, a load-balance issue, or a failing connection at the bus bar. We test until we know which one, and we explain what we found in plain English.

5

Plain-language quote before any work

You get a written estimate on-site before we start the repair. Emergency rates vary by time-of-day — after-hours, Sunday, and holiday dispatch may include a surcharge. We name the surcharge before we dispatch, not after.

6

Repair — most emergencies resolved in one visit

Our trucks carry common parts — breakers, outlets, wire, connectors, disconnect hardware. Most residential emergencies get resolved the same visit. If the repair requires parts we don’t carry or a permit for larger work, we do the temporary safe-state fix and schedule the permanent repair.

7

Walk-through and prevention advice

Before we leave, we explain what failed and why. If the emergency points to a larger issue — an aging panel, undersized service, Federal Pacific breakers — we name it so you can plan the fix on your schedule, not ours.

How emergency estimates work

Emergency electrical rates vary by time of day and the scope of the repair — a midnight breaker swap costs differently than a Tuesday-afternoon outlet replacement. We give you a written estimate on-site before any work starts, and if the dispatch is after-hours, Sunday, or a holiday, we name the emergency surcharge on the phone before we roll — not after we arrive.

  • Emergency electrical pricing varies by time of day and the work required. We give you the exact number before any work starts — no surprises, no fine print.
  • Standard rates during business hours. After-hours dispatch (overnight, Sunday, holidays) may include an emergency surcharge that we name on the phone before we dispatch — not after we arrive.
  • The estimate covers the diagnosis, the repair labor, and any parts from the truck. If the repair requires follow-up work (panel upgrade, rewiring), that gets a separate estimate on a separate visit.
  • Diagnostic-only visits are available if you want the diagnosis without committing to same-visit repair. We tell you what’s wrong and what it costs to fix — you decide.
No trip charge for Manassas, Manassas Park, Gainesville, Bristow, or Centreville during business hours. Emergency dispatch outside business hours includes a trip/surcharge component named before we roll.

We don’t post fixed prices for emergency work because every emergency is different — time of day, scope of failure, parts needed. The on-site estimate is the only honest number.

About Mohammad Adam, Licensed Electrical Contractor

Mohammad Adam, Licensed Electrical Contractor at S&H Contracting Unlimited serving Manassas, VA

Mohammad Adam is a Master Electrician licensed in Virginia — the highest electrician tier the state issues, requiring several years of journeyman work, a passed state exam, and a clean record. Over 16+ years in the trade, Mohammad Adam has built a licensed and insured residential and commercial electrical practice serving Northern Virginia, Washington DC, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. He runs a maintenance team, which is what makes the 24/7 emergency dispatch and 45-minute response time an operational reality, not a phone-room promise.

Mohammad Adam leads the diagnostic on most residential emergency calls personally. The approach is diagnostic-first, fix-second — he reads the panel, runs the tests, and explains what’s happening in plain English before any work starts. Half the time a homeowner calls expecting a full panel replacement, the actual cause is a single worn breaker, a load-balance issue, or a downstream short. The walk-through costs nothing. The misdiagnosis costs everything.

S&H Contracting Unlimited holds a 4.9-star average across 68 customer reviews. Real reviews from Northern Virginia, DC, and Maryland customers across residential and commercial jobs. 4.9-star average across 68 verified Google reviews.

Manassas neighborhoods we serve

We cover all of Manassas, VA, including:

  • Old Town Manassas — the historic downtown core around Center Street and the train station
  • Sudley — established neighborhoods near the Battlefield Park and Sudley Road corridor
  • Bull Run area — northwest city edge near GMU and the Hylton Performing Arts Center
  • Wellington — popular family subdivision with parks and community amenities
  • Signal Hill — established residential subdivision in the central city
  • Route 28 corridor residential — townhome and apartment communities along the eastern commercial strip
  • Blooms Crossing area — newer residential area with modern homes and townhomes
  • Ashton Glen — suburban neighborhood with varied housing and community amenities

Outside Manassas, we serve Manassas Park, Gainesville, Bristow, Centreville, Haymarket, Woodbridge, Dale City, Lake Ridge, and the rest of Prince William County. We also cover western Fairfax County and Fauquier County communities.

Related electrical services in Manassas

Emergency visits often uncover issues worth fixing on a planned schedule — an aging panel, undersized service, or a circuit layout that can’t keep up with modern loads. These are the services Manassas homeowners book most after an emergency call.

Frequently asked questions

What is considered an electrical emergency?

An electrical emergency is any situation that poses an immediate risk of fire, shock, or injury. Sparking outlets, a burning smell from behind a wall or at the panel, a breaker panel that’s hot to the touch, exposed or damaged wiring, water pooling near electrical equipment, and partial or total power loss when the utility confirms no outage on their end — all of these qualify. If you see active fire, smoke, or sparks, call 911 first, then call us at 703-972-5571. We handle the electrical diagnosis and repair once the scene is safe.

How quickly can you arrive for an emergency in Manassas, VA?

Typically within 45 minutes inside the Manassas service area. That number is real because Mohammad Adam runs a maintenance team — there’s almost always a truck within the response radius, day or night. We dispatch 24/7, including overnight, Sundays, and holidays. If the team is already out on another emergency and we can’t hit 45 minutes, we tell you on the phone and give you an honest ETA — not a vague arrival window. Call 703-972-5571 and we’ll confirm the timeline before we roll.

What should I do before the electrician arrives?

Six things, in this order: 1. If there’s active fire, smoke, or someone was shocked and injured, call 911 first. 2. Kill the main breaker if you can reach it safely — this de-energizes the house. 3. Do not touch any wet electrical equipment, ever. 4. If there’s water near outlets or the panel, stay clear and wait for us. 5. Keep children and pets away from the affected area. 6. Do not re-energize circuits that tripped — if a breaker tripped, it tripped for a reason. Then call 703-972-5571 and describe what you see.

When should I call 911 instead of an electrician?

Call 911 first when there’s active fire, visible smoke, sustained sparking, a downed power line on your property, or someone who has been shocked and is injured or unresponsive. These are life-safety situations — firefighters and EMS come first. Once the scene is safe, call us at 703-972-5571. We handle the electrical diagnosis and repair after the immediate danger is resolved. If you’re unsure whether your situation is a 911 call or an electrician call, err on the side of 911. We’d rather show up to a scene the fire department already cleared than have you wait on a situation that needed first responders.

How much does an emergency electrician cost in Manassas, VA?

We don’t post fixed prices for emergency work because every emergency is different — time of day, scope of failure, and parts needed all factor in. What we do: you get a written estimate on-site before any work starts, so you know the exact number and approve it before we pick up a tool. If the call is after-hours, on a Sunday, or on a holiday, there may be an emergency surcharge — and we name that surcharge on the phone before we dispatch, not after we arrive. No surprise charges. The on-site estimate is the only honest number for emergency electrical work.

Are you really available 24/7 — including Sundays and holidays?

Yes. 24/7 means 24/7 — overnight, Sundays, Thanksgiving, New Year’s, no exceptions. This isn’t a marketing line. Mohammad Adam runs a maintenance team with trucks in the Northern Virginia service area, so there’s almost always someone within the response radius regardless of the day or hour. The typical response inside the Manassas area is 45 minutes. If you call at 2 AM on Christmas morning with a melted HVAC pull-out disconnect, we answer the phone, triage the symptoms, and dispatch. The maintenance team is what makes the 24/7 claim credible — it’s not one person on call, it’s a team.

What happens during an emergency electrician visit?

Safety check first — we confirm the scene is safe, kill the right breakers, and isolate the problem circuit before anything else. Then targeted diagnosis: we find the root cause, not just the symptom. A tripping breaker might be the breaker itself, a short downstream, a load-balance issue, or a failing bus-bar connection — we test until we know which one. Then you get a plain-language quote on-site before we touch anything. Most residential emergencies are resolved in one visit because our trucks carry common parts — breakers, outlets, wire, connectors, disconnect hardware. If the repair needs parts we don’t carry or a permit, we do the temporary safe-state fix and schedule the permanent work.

Do you dispatch to areas outside Manassas?

Probably. The truck radius is 50 miles from the Fairfax / Prince William County corner, which covers Woodbridge, Lake Ridge, Dale City, Manassas, Oakton, Fairfax Station, Alexandria, McLean, Sterling, Ashburn, Chantilly, and into DC and Maryland. For emergency work inside that radius, we dispatch 24/7. For planned work outside it, or emergency work at the edges of the radius, we’ll usually know within one phone call whether we can take the job or whether it’s smarter to refer you to someone closer. Call 703-972-5571 and we’ll tell you straight.

Electrical emergency? Call now.

24/7 emergency electrician in Manassas, VA. Mohammad Adam and team dispatch within 45 minutes — overnight, Sundays, holidays, no exceptions. Diagnosis before any work starts, written estimate before we pick up a tool.
Call 703-972-5571 now.

703-972-5571