Round Here Pros
Basehor, KS
Basehor · Electricians

Basehor's
neighborhood
electricians.

Tell us what's going on around the house — a local pro will text you back today.

What's going on?
No phone tag. No call center. A neighbor texts you back.
How this works

Three steps. No phone tree.

1
Tell us what you need
2
We find the right local pro
3
They text you back today
Meet a local pro

Eli, from over by Basehor.

Eli outside his truck — Basehor
Eli Hartmann · Hartmann Electric
Lives in Basehor · 11 years licensed

I grew up between Basehor and Bonner Springs — most of the houses 'round here, I've already been inside one of 'em. If your panel's making a buzz, I probably know which builder put it in.

From a Basehor homeowner

I filled out the little form on a Tuesday morning. By lunch, a guy named Mike had texted me a picture of the part he was bringing. Felt like calling a neighbor, not a company.

Megan R. · 155th & Parker Ave., Basehor
Neighborhoods we serve

If you're in Basehor, you're in.

We send work to pros who actually live and work between the high school and the river. A few of the streets and subdivisions we cover:

Falcon Lakes
Glenwood Ridge
Wolf Creek
Pinehurst
Cedar Lakes
Stone Creek
155th & Leavenworth
Parker Ave.
Old Town Basehor
147th corridor

Not sure if you're in our patch? Drop your address in the form and we'll tell you straight.

About electricians in Basehor

Basehor is a small town with old wiring in some places and brand-new builds in others. The pros 'round here know the difference. If your house was put up before the late nineties, it's worth knowing whether the panel was sized for what you've added since — a hot tub, a finished basement, a second oven. If your house was built in the last decade, the wiring's probably fine but the connections at the breakers may have loosened up.

We work with electricians who live in town, drive a truck with their name on the side, and have been doing this long enough that they don't need to look up the answer to your panel question. That's the whole point.

Most of the calls we see from Basehor are smaller than a whole-house rewire and bigger than a single outlet — adding a few cans in the basement, putting a 50-amp circuit in the garage for an EV charger, sorting out a flickering light that nobody can figure out. The pros take it on, give you a real number, and get it done.