Soquel electrical contractor — historic village and Santa Cruz Mountains service area

Service Area · Soquel

Soquel Electrician — County-Permitted, Older-Home & Hillside Ready

Soquel is an unincorporated community just inland of Capitola — which means there is no city building department here. Every permit runs through the County of Santa Cruz Unified Permit Center, and the electric utility is PG&E. Between the historic Soquel Village core and the rural hillside parcels climbing toward the Santa Cruz Mountains, the electrical work here is its own thing: older-home rewiring, County plan check, and PSPS-driven backup power.

Why Soquel Is Different

No city hall, a historic village core, and parcels that climb into the mountains.

Soquel is unincorporated. It is not a city, so there is no Soquel building department — every electrical permit, inspection, and plan check flows through the County of Santa Cruz Planning Department and its Unified Permit Center at 701 Ocean Street in Santa Cruz. Contractors who only work the incorporated cities sometimes get this wrong; we permit County work routinely and know the difference between an over-the-counter EZ Permit for a single-trade electrical job and a full ePlan review for a service upgrade or ADU.

The housing stock splits in two. The historic Soquel Village core — Main Street, Porter Street, and the lowlands along Soquel Creek — has genuinely old homes, some predating modern wiring entirely. Knob-and-tube, two-wire ungrounded circuits, fuse panels, and undersized 60–100A services are common finds here. Much of the village also sits in the Soquel Creek flood zone, which affects where service equipment and outlets can sit. Then there is the other Soquel: rural and hillside parcels up Soquel–San Jose Road, Laurel Glen, and Olive Springs, with larger lots, well-and-septic systems, and wine-country edges climbing toward the mountains.

The utility is PG&E, and that matters more here than in town. The hillside east of the village is squarely in PG&E's Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) footprint — multi-day outages during fire-weather season are a real planning factor, which is why generator and transfer-switch work is a steady part of what we do in Soquel. We coordinate PG&E disconnect, reconnect, and meter spotting on every service-entrance job the way we do across the rest of our service area.

Soquel Quick Facts

  • Utility: PG&E (with PSPS exposure in the hills)
  • Permit AHJ: County of Santa Cruz — Unified Permit Center
  • Typical stock: Historic village homes + rural hillside parcels
  • Soquel Creek: Flood-zone siting near the village core
  • Hillside: Well/septic, larger lots, generator demand

Installing an EV charger in Soquel? See our Soquel EV charging guide.

Neighborhoods We Serve in Soquel

12 neighborhoods, one direct crew.

Soquel runs from the creek-side village up into the foothills. Each area has a distinct electrical character — older village wiring near the creek, rural service on the hill parcels. We work all of them.

Soquel Village

Historic core — oldest homes, knob-and-tube candidates, fuse panels

Main Street

Village heart — small commercial, antique shops, mixed-use older buildings

Porter Street

Historic village corridor, older residential and small commercial

Soquel Drive corridor

Commercial spine — retail, restaurants, services; tenant improvement zone

Soquel Creek lowlands

Flood-zone siting affects service-equipment and outlet placement

Soquel–San Jose Road (Old San Jose Road)

Climbs into the hills — rural service, wine-country edges, PSPS exposure

Laurel Glen Road

Rural hillside parcels, larger lots, well/septic, generator demand

Olive Springs Road

Canyon and hillside parcels east toward the mountains

Glen Haven

Hillside residential off the Soquel–San Jose corridor

Mountain View / Cherryvale

Mid-Soquel residential, steady panel-upgrade activity

East Soquel

Mixed older and post-war stock between the village and Aptos

Capitola border

Soquel parcels adjacent to Capitola — remodel and ADU activity

Common Soquel Electrical Work

What we get called for most in Soquel.

Click through to the service hub for full scope detail, hedged pricing, and FAQ.

Soquel Permit Process

Step by step, quote to closeout.

Because Soquel is unincorporated, permits run through the County of Santa Cruz, not a city. Single-trade electrical jobs can often go through the County's EZ Permit path, while service upgrades, rewires, and ADUs route through ePlan review. The workflow below is typical for a residential service upgrade or rewire.

1

On-site assessment

We measure the existing service, photo-document the panel and meter, check flood-zone siting near the creek, and flag any PG&E coordination items (service-drop sizing, meter location, PSPS exposure on hillside parcels).

2

Drawings & load calc

Single-line diagram, panel schedule, and NEC-compliant load calculation. For rural parcels we include well-pump and septic loads; for ADU work we include the ADU on the calc.

3

Submit to County of Santa Cruz

Single-trade electrical work is filed through County EZ Permit where eligible; service upgrades, rewires, and ADUs go through the Unified Permit Center / ePlan review. We respond to plan-check comments within 1–3 business days.

4

County plan check

Over-the-counter EZ Permits can issue same-day for qualifying single-trade scopes. Service upgrades, whole-house rewires, and ADU packages go through County plan review, which takes longer depending on workload.

5

PG&E coordination

For service-entrance work we schedule the PG&E disconnect/reconnect and meter spot. Lead times vary and have been running longer in recent years — we confirm the window when we book your job and stage materials around it.

6

Inspections through closeout

County rough inspection (where applicable) and final inspection. Inspector callouts addressed same-day where possible. Signed permit card and closeout packet delivered before final invoicing.

Codes & Local Requirements

What applies in Soquel.

California codes apply statewide, but the enforcing authority in Soquel is the County of Santa Cruz, and a few County-specific points are worth knowing.

2025 CEC (California Electrical Code)

Currently in effect statewide and enforced by the County of Santa Cruz on all electrical permits in unincorporated Soquel.

Title 24 Part 6 (Energy Code)

Lighting power density, automatic shut-off, daylight zones, and acceptance testing on controls. Enforced by the County on residential and commercial scopes.

Title 24 Part 11 (CALGreen)

EV-ready and EV-capable conduit requirements on new residential construction and major remodels, plus battery-storage-ready wiring. The County enforces CALGreen on qualifying projects.

Santa Cruz County reach code / electrification

The County adopted an all-electric reach code for new construction in 2021, but suspended enforcement of the all-electric provisions as of July 2024. We confirm the current County position at the site visit so it factors into your scope.

Flood-zone siting (Soquel Creek)

Much of the village core sits in the Soquel Creek flood zone, which affects allowable elevation and placement of service equipment, outlets, and panels. We design service upgrades to meet flood-zone requirements where they apply.

Rural well/septic & PSPS planning

On hillside parcels, well-pump and septic loads belong on the load calc, and PG&E's PSPS exposure makes backup-power and transfer-switch planning a practical code-and-safety consideration, not an afterthought.

FAQ

Soquel-specific questions, straight answers.

Soquel is unincorporated, so there is no city building department. All electrical permits, plan checks, and inspections go through the County of Santa Cruz at the Unified Permit Center, 701 Ocean Street in Santa Cruz. Single-trade electrical work can often be filed through the County's EZ Permit system, while service upgrades, rewires, and ADUs route through full County plan review. We permit County work routinely.

Yes. Soquel is served by PG&E, not a municipal utility. For any work touching the service entrance, meter, or service drop, we coordinate the disconnect, reconnect, and meter spot directly with PG&E. On hillside parcels east of the village, PG&E's Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) program is also a real planning factor.

Yes — the historic Soquel Village core around Main Street, Porter Street, and the creek has genuinely old homes, and we regularly find knob-and-tube wiring, two-wire ungrounded circuits, fuse panels, and undersized 60–100A services. Rewiring those homes means grounded circuits, AFCI/GFCI protection, and a plan that respects the original construction while bringing it up to current code.

If you are on a hillside parcel up Soquel–San Jose Road, Laurel Glen, or Olive Springs, it is worth considering. Those areas sit in PG&E's PSPS footprint and can lose power for multiple days during fire-weather season — and if you are on a well, no power means no water. We size standby generators and transfer switches to keep the well pump, septic, refrigeration, and essentials running through an outage.

It can. Much of the village core sits in the Soquel Creek flood zone, which affects the allowable elevation and placement of service equipment, panels, and outlets. When we do a service upgrade or rewire on a flood-zone parcel, we design the service entrance to meet those siting requirements and flag it during the County permit process.

Yes. We work the full range of Soquel — from the village lowlands up Soquel–San Jose Road, Laurel Glen, Olive Springs, and Glen Haven into the foothills. Rural and hillside parcels bring their own scope: well-pump and septic circuits, larger lots with long runs, generator and transfer-switch work, and PG&E coordination on remote service drops.

It depends on the scope. Qualifying single-trade electrical jobs can often issue same-day through the County's EZ Permit path. Service upgrades, whole-house rewires, and ADU packages go through County plan review, which takes longer based on the County's current workload. We submit complete packages up front to keep the review tight and avoid revision loops.

Yes. The Soquel Drive corridor and Soquel Village have steady commercial turnover — cafes, retail, services, and antique shops. Our commercial scope covers tenant improvement, branch circuits, lighting controls (Title 24), kitchen and POS power, and County-permitted closeout. See our commercial tenant improvement page for full scope detail.

Working in Soquel?

County-permitted crew. Older-home & hillside ready.

Whether it's a historic village rewire, a 200A upgrade with PG&E coordination, or a PSPS generator on a hillside parcel — same direct W-2 crew, written quote within 48 hours.

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