You've probably landed here in one of three situations. You're buying a house in Dublin and the survey has raised questions about the electrics. You're a landlord getting a property ready for new tenants. Or you've just been handed a report with codes on it and you're trying to work out whether you've got a serious problem or just a list of upgrades to think about.
That's where an electrical installation condition report can feel more complicated than it needs to be. The name is a mouthful, the paperwork can look technical, and plenty of people aren't sure what happens after the inspection, especially if the result comes back unsatisfactory.
The good news is that it's far more straightforward than it sounds. An EICR is a formal way of checking the condition of a property's fixed electrical system so you know what's safe, what needs attention, and what needs to happen next. If you're already dealing with flickering lights, tripping circuits, or signs of wear, it also helps to understand where an inspection fits in alongside broader electrical home repairs in Dublin.
Table of Contents
- Your Guide to Electrical Safety in Dublin
- What Is an Electrical Installation Condition Report
- When Do You Need an EICR for Your Property
- Decoding the Report Understanding Observations and Codes
- The EICR Process with Forward Electrical
- What Happens After an Unsatisfactory Report
- Choosing a Qualified Electrician in Dublin
- EICR Frequently Asked Questions
Your Guide to Electrical Safety in Dublin
You get the keys, move a few bits of furniture, and notice the electrics do not quite add up. A newer consumer unit in the hall. Older sockets in the back room. An extension that looks newer than the rest of the house, but no paperwork to match. That is a common enough starting point in Dublin, especially in older homes, rentals, and premises that have been altered over the years.
An electrical installation condition report gives a clear picture of the fixed electrics as they stand today. It checks the installation properly and puts the findings in writing, so you are not relying on assumptions, old certs, or a quick look at the fuse board.
Practical rule: If you own, let, manage, or are buying a property, clear records on the electrics save time, money, and arguments later.
Value comes from what happens next. A satisfactory report gives you a solid record to keep on file. An unsatisfactory report gives you a list of specific items to fix, in order of priority, so the remedial work can be scoped and priced properly. For landlords in Dublin, that means fewer surprises between tenancies. For homeowners, it means you can deal with actual defects instead of guessing what might need attention. If small faults come up alongside the inspection, it also helps to understand the difference between reportable issues and routine electrical home repairs.
In practice, that makes conversations much easier. Instead of hearing "the electrics need work," you can ask what was found, how urgent it is, what needs to be done first, and what can be planned in stages. That is the part many people want explained plainly. Not the paperwork itself, but the route from report to safe, compliant installation.
What Is an Electrical Installation Condition Report
You get a report back, and the first question is usually simple. What exactly has been checked, and what does this paperwork mean for the property?
An electrical installation condition report, or EICR, is a formal inspection report on the fixed electrics in a building. It deals with the parts you do not unplug and carry away. Wiring, the consumer unit or fuse board, earthing, bonding, sockets, switches, and the safety devices protecting the installation all fall within its scope. The job of the report is to record the condition of those items at the time of inspection and state whether the installation is satisfactory or unsatisfactory for continued use.
That matters because a property can have lights, heating, and working sockets while still having faults hidden behind the scenes. Older alterations, worn accessories, poor past workmanship, or missing protection do not always show themselves in day-to-day use. An EICR puts those issues in writing, with clear observations instead of guesswork.
What the report records
A proper report shows what was inspected, what was tested, and any areas the electrician could not access. If part of the installation was hidden or locked off, that should be stated plainly. If faults are found, they should be written as specific observations that can be priced and repaired, not vague comments that leave the owner guessing.
In practical terms, the report looks at fixed items such as:
- Consumer unit or fuse board: its condition, suitability, and the protection it provides
- Sockets and switches: signs of damage, wear, loose fittings, or poor installation
- Wiring and connections: deterioration, age-related issues, or previous work that falls short of current expectations
- Earthing and bonding: whether the main safety arrangements are present and effective
- Protective devices such as RCDs: whether they are fitted and operating as intended
A good EICR also gives context. It records the age or type of installation where that can be identified, notes any limitations during the inspection, and finishes with an overall outcome. For a landlord or homeowner in Dublin, that creates a clear record to keep on file and a practical starting point if remedial work is needed.
The useful part is not the paperwork for its own sake. It is what the report lets you do next. If the result is satisfactory, you have a dated record showing the installation was checked. If the result is unsatisfactory, you have a defined list of issues to sort, usually in an order that helps you deal with the most important items first.
A good EICR should leave you with a clear plan, not a vague warning.
That is why the wording matters. Done properly, an EICR gives homeowners, landlords, and property managers a straight answer on the condition of the fixed electrics and a practical route to put anything wrong right.
When Do You Need an EICR for Your Property
A lot of people book an EICR only after a problem starts causing hassle. A sale is underway. A new tenant is due in next week. A fuse board keeps tripping and nobody is sure whether it is a minor fault or the start of a bigger job. It is better to arrange the inspection before you are under pressure, because the report gives you time to price the work, plan access, and deal with any defects in the right order.
For homeowners
For owner-occupied homes, the commonly recommended interval is every 10 years, or on moving into a new property, as set out in Electrical Safety First's guide to condition reports.
In Dublin, that timing is sensible. I regularly see houses that look tidy and well kept but still have older wiring, additions from past renovations, or protection that is no longer up to the standard you would want today. None of that automatically means a full rewire is needed. It does mean a proper inspection is the sensible way to find out where you stand before a small issue turns into a disruptive one.
A house purchase is another common trigger. An EICR will not tell you everything about a property, but it does give you a clearer picture of the fixed electrics before you take responsibility for them.
For landlords and rental properties
Rental properties are usually checked more often. The common benchmark is every 5 years.
That shorter cycle reflects real wear and tear. Tenancies change, appliances get swapped, sockets take more knocks, and small defects can sit unnoticed between visits. For landlords, the practical value of an EICR is not just the certificate itself. It gives you a list of what needs attention, which is exactly what you need if the report comes back unsatisfactory and you have to organise remedial work quickly.
This matters most at the handover points. Before a new tenant moves in, or soon after a long tenancy ends, an inspection can save a lot of chasing later.
For businesses and commercial premises
Commercial premises should also be inspected on a regular cycle, often around 5 years depending on the type of use and the condition of the installation.
A shop, office, salon, café, or small workshop usually has more electrical demand than a typical house. There may be extra lighting, equipment added during fit-outs, storage areas, kitchen supplies, signage, or bits of old and new work joined together over time. An EICR helps identify what is safe to leave, what should be improved, and what needs to be dealt with before it causes downtime.
For business owners, that next-step clarity is the useful part. If the report flags problems, you can separate urgent remedial work from items that can be planned into maintenance or a refit.
| Property type | Common guidance |
|---|---|
| Homeowner-occupied property | 10-year interval recommended |
| Rental property | 5-year cycle commonly used |
| Commercial premises | Often managed on a 5-year cycle |
Book the inspection before there is a crisis. That gives you options, and if the outcome is unsatisfactory, it is far easier to organise repairs calmly than to scramble after a failed letting, a delayed sale, or a call from a worried tenant.
Decoding the Report Understanding Observations and Codes
Why the wording matters
When people first open an EICR, the part that usually throws them is the coding. The document can look technical, but the codes are really there to sort findings by seriousness.
That's important because a proper report isn't meant to be a vague summary. NICEIC guidance says the report should state the extent of what was inspected and tested, and each item recorded should describe a specific defect, omission, damage, or dangerous condition. You can read that in the NICEIC best practice guide on inspection reporting.
So if your report is done properly, it should help you prioritise the work. It shouldn't leave you guessing.
To make the codes easier to follow, this short video gives useful context before we break them down in plain English:
What the codes mean in plain English
The main observation codes you'll usually see are these:
C1
This means danger present. It points to something that presents an immediate risk and needs urgent action. In practical terms, this is not a “we'll get to it next month” item.
C2
This means potentially dangerous. It may not be causing immediate harm at the exact moment of inspection, but it's serious enough that remedial action should be treated as urgent.
C3
This means improvement recommended. It's not classed the same way as C1 or C2, but it's a sign that the installation could be brought up to a better standard.
FI
This means further investigation required. The electrician has identified something that needs closer examination before a final view can be taken.
If you remember one thing, remember this. C1 and C2 are safety items. C3 is an improvement item. FI means there's still another question to answer.
People often get anxious when they see a list of observations. That's understandable. But a report with coded observations is doing its job. It's turning a hidden issue into a visible one with a level of urgency attached.
A practical example helps:
| Code | What it means for you |
|---|---|
| C1 | Make safe and arrange immediate remedial work |
| C2 | Book corrective work without delay |
| C3 | Consider upgrading when planning maintenance or improvement works |
| FI | Arrange the extra investigation needed to reach a clear conclusion |
An EICR becomes far less intimidating once you stop reading it as a verdict and start reading it as a priority list.
The EICR Process with Forward Electrical
Before the inspection
From the client side, the process should feel organised and clear from the start. The first step is usually a conversation about the property itself. A small apartment, an older semi-detached house, and a mixed-use commercial unit all need slightly different planning.
The useful details are simple. Age of the property, whether it's occupied, whether there have been extensions or previous upgrades, and whether there are any known electrical issues already. None of that changes the purpose of the inspection, but it does help set expectations properly.
On the day
The inspection itself is thorough but it shouldn't feel chaotic. A qualified electrician will need access to the distribution board, sockets, lighting points, and other fixed parts of the installation. Some testing means the power may need to be turned off briefly while circuits are checked safely.
That catches some people off guard, especially in occupied homes or businesses. It's normal. Proper testing can't be done by just looking around. The electrician needs to assess the installation, record observations accurately, and note any limitations where access isn't possible.
A practical visit usually includes:
- Visual assessment of accessible parts so obvious damage, wear, older components, or signs of poor previous work can be identified.
- Testing of circuits and protection to assess whether the installation is behaving as it should.
- Recording observations clearly rather than leaving the client with vague remarks.
- Noting limitations where parts of the installation could not reasonably be inspected.
The best inspections are calm, methodical, and well explained. If the process feels rushed, the paperwork often is too.
After the testing is complete
Once the inspection is finished, the report should be issued in a format that's easy to read and keep on file. A typed digital report is far more useful than a loose handwritten note, especially for landlords, managing agents, and business owners who may need to refer back to it later.
If there are observations, the next useful step is explanation. Not everyone wants every technical detail, but everyone should understand three things: what was found, how urgent it is, and what needs to happen next.
That's the point where a proper EICR becomes useful rather than just official. It gives you a record, a safety position, and a workable list of actions if remedial work is needed.
What Happens After an Unsatisfactory Report
You open the report, see unsatisfactory, and the first question is usually simple enough. What do I need to do now?
In practice, that result does not automatically mean the whole installation is dangerous or that the property needs major work. It means the inspection has found issues that need to be put right before the installation can be regarded as satisfactory. The useful part starts here, because the report should tell you what those issues are and how urgently they need attention.
For Dublin landlords and homeowners, the first job is to separate the urgent items from the rest. If the report includes C1 or C2 observations, those come first. A C1 means there is immediate danger. A C2 means the defect could become dangerous, so it still needs prompt repair. PAT Testing Ireland's EICR explainer gives a useful plain-English overview of the kinds of faults that can lead to those codes, including problems with earthing, bonding, protective devices, polarity, and test results.
The next step is to get the remedial work properly scoped. That matters more than many people realise. A good electrician will tell you exactly what is being fixed, what can be repaired, what should be upgraded, and whether any part of the installation needs further investigation before a price is agreed. Some jobs are straightforward, such as replacing a damaged accessory, correcting bonding, or sorting faults in a consumer unit. Other reports uncover a pattern of older wiring, poor additions, or repeated defects across circuits, and that can lead to bigger decisions about upgrading or rewiring an older Dublin house.
For landlords, there is also a practical management piece. Tenants may need access arranged. Power may need to be isolated for part of the job. If there are urgent defects, temporary safety measures might be needed until the repair is completed. That is why a clear plan beats a vague promise to “come back and sort it”.
A sensible sequence usually looks like this:
- Read each observation, not just the overall result
- Prioritise C1 and C2 items for prompt repair
- Ask for a written scope of remedial works
- Agree access, timing, and any likely disruption
- Keep the EICR, invoices, and certificates together
The paperwork after the repair matters. Once the defects listed on the report have been corrected, the electrician should issue the right certification for the work carried out. Depending on what was done, that may be a certificate for the remedial work itself, and in some cases a further inspection or updated report to confirm the installation is now satisfactory.
That final step is where people often feel the fog lifts. You are no longer looking at a problem with no clear end point. You have a record of what was found, what was repaired, and what has been certified. For a homeowner, that is useful future proofing. For a landlord, it is part of showing the property has been properly maintained and the electrical installation has not been left with known faults.
The main mistake is delay. Unsatisfactory reports are manageable when the findings are dealt with in order, by a qualified electrician, with the paperwork finished properly at the end.
Choosing a Qualified Electrician in Dublin
What to check before you book
Not every electrician carries out inspection and reporting to the same standard. For an electrical installation condition report, the quality of the inspection matters just as much as the fact that one was done.
The first thing to check is registration. In Ireland, you should be looking for a Safe Electric registered electrical contractor. That gives you a basic level of confidence that you're dealing with someone working within the proper framework. If you're not sure what that means in practice, it helps to read up on what a registered electrical contractor in Ireland is expected to provide.
Then look at the fit between the contractor and your property. A modern apartment block, a Victorian redbrick in Dublin, and a commercial kitchen all present different inspection challenges. Experience with similar properties matters because older buildings and altered installations often need a more careful eye.
A simple checklist helps:
- Registration: Confirm the electrician is properly registered and qualified for inspection work.
- Relevant experience: Ask whether they regularly inspect properties like yours.
- Insurance and professionalism: A serious contractor should have appropriate cover and a professional reporting process.
- Typed reporting: Ask whether you'll receive a detailed report, not just a quick handwritten note or verbal summary.
You don't need someone who makes the process sound dramatic. You need someone methodical, clear, and comfortable explaining findings in plain English.
EICR Frequently Asked Questions
How much does an EICR cost
Cost depends on the property and the amount of testing needed. The main factors are the size of the premises, the age of the installation, the number of circuits, how easy the system is to access, and whether the property is occupied.
In Dublin, an older house that has been extended or altered over the years usually takes more time than a newer property with a tidy, well-labelled consumer unit. That extra time is not fluff. It is what allows the electrician to test properly and give clear recommendations if anything needs attention.
How long does the inspection take
Inspection time varies for the same reasons. A small apartment can be straightforward. A larger house, rental property, or commercial unit with more circuits and limited access will take longer.
The sensible approach is to judge the job by the standard of the inspection, not by speed. If the testing is thorough and the observations are recorded clearly, that is time well spent.
Is it required when selling a house
An EICR is not usually treated as a standard sale document in the way title paperwork is. It can still be a very useful report to have if the wiring is older, records are missing, or a buyer raises questions about the condition of the electrics.
For sellers, it helps reduce uncertainty before surveys and viewings turn into price discussions. For buyers, it gives a clearer picture of what may need repair after purchase.
Is an EICR the same as PAT testing
They cover different parts of electrical safety.
An electrical installation condition report deals with the fixed electrical installation. That includes wiring, the fuse board, sockets, protective devices, and the permanent parts of the system built into the property. PAT testing deals with portable appliances such as kettles, monitors, extension leads, and other plug-in equipment.
That distinction matters after an unsatisfactory result. If the report highlights faults in the fixed wiring, the next step is usually remedial work on the installation itself, followed by updated paperwork or a further inspection where needed. For landlords and homeowners, that is often the part that feels least clear, but in practice it is straightforward once the observations are prioritised and the work is planned in the right order.
If you need advice on an electrical installation condition report for a home, rental property, or commercial premises in Dublin, Forward Electrical can help with practical guidance, professional inspections, remedial works, and the certification needed to keep your property safe and properly documented.

