Free downloads · Ranzo Tech LLC

Electrical Work Order Template

Use a free electrical work order template (PDF, Word, Excel) to document scope, safety checks, materials used, completion notes, and customer sign-off.

Home Templates Work Order Templates Electrical Work Order Template
Clean, professional layout Trade-specific guidance Works with Word / Excel Print-friendly

Template preview

This preview shows the structure and recommended sections. Your download files contain the same layout in Word/Excel/PDF format.

BrightWire Electric

(555) 010-6628 · accounts@brightwireelectric.example
900 Elm Blvd, Springfield, USA

WORK ORDER

WO # 0001
Scheduled: 2026-01-24
Crew: Tech A
Customer
Jordan Lee
455 Maple St, Springfield, USA
Job
455 Maple St, Springfield, USA
Task checklist + completion notes.
DoneChecklist itemNotes
Breaker panel verified and circuits identified
Power isolated + safety checks completed
Tested voltage/continuity as required
Work area left safe; covers/plates installed
Customer sign-off: _____________________

Checklist items that reduce callbacks

These are common line items/checks used by many electrical businesses. Edit, remove, or add items to match your service packages and local requirements.

  • Breaker panel verified and circuits identified
  • Power isolated + safety checks completed
  • Tested voltage/continuity as required
  • Work area left safe; covers/plates installed

How to use this electrical workorder template

  1. Assign the job to a technician/crew and record the arrival window.
  2. Confirm access details, on-site contact, and any special instructions.
  3. Use a checklist to document each step so nothing is missed.
  4. Record materials used and any approvals for changes to scope.
  5. Capture completion notes and customer sign-off (signature or written confirmation).

Tip: If you want a faster workflow, use our workorder generator to preview totals and print to PDF in your browser.

Field-by-field guidance

Use this table to fill the template correctly and reduce back-and-forth with customers. The goal is clarity: what was done, where it was done, and what the customer is paying for.

FieldWhat to include
Work order #Unique job identifier used for dispatch, time tracking, and documentation.
Customer + job addressInclude access instructions, contact person on-site, and preferred contact method.
Technician/crewAssigned technician(s) and arrival window.
Task checklistBreak the job into steps so nothing is missed.
Materials usedRecord materials used and quantities for inventory and invoicing accuracy.
Photos/notesDocument pre-existing damage, site conditions, and progress notes (if agreed).
Safety checksSafety steps relevant to the trade and the job site.
Test resultsRecord readings or checks performed (e.g., leak test, temp split, voltage).
Customer approvalSignature or written approval for scope changes and completion.
Completion summaryWhat was done, what remains, and recommended next steps.
Warranty / follow-upIf a follow-up is required, schedule and document it here.

Filled example (work order)

Example only — customize the checklist to your standard operating procedure.

BrightWire Electric · (555) 010-6628 · accounts@brightwireelectric.example
900 Elm Blvd, Springfield, USA

Work Order #: WO-2026-001
Scheduled: January 24, 2026
Customer: Jordan Lee
Job Address: 455 Maple St, Springfield, USA

DoneChecklist itemNotes
Breaker panel verified and circuits identified
Power isolated + safety checks completed
Tested voltage/continuity as required
Work area left safe; covers/plates installed

Completion notes: ___________________________________________
Customer sign-off: _____________________

Common mistakes (and how to avoid them)

  • Not noting whether permits are included or excluded.
  • Not listing breaker/outlet quantities (scope creep).
  • Skipping safety notes and test results.
  • Not recording circuit IDs for future service.

If you need to change the scope mid-job, document it in writing and update the estimate/work order before the work continues.

FAQ

Should permits be a separate line item?

Yes. It clarifies what you’re charging and whether fees are estimates or pass-through costs.

What’s the best way to describe electrical labor?

Use clear descriptions like “Install 4 recessed lights” or “Replace 2 GFCI outlets” rather than vague “electrical work”.