Service

Electric Heat & Heat Pump Wiring

Cold-climate heat, wired right.
Licensed Electricians
Alaska licensed & bonded
Fully Insured
Bonded & GL covered
NEC Code Compliant
Every install, every time
24/7 Emergency
Real electricians on call
20+ Years Experience
Decades in the trade
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Workmanship in writing

Mini-split disconnects, baseboard heat, snow-melt mats, heated floors, pipe-trace circuits, and roof de-icing — we wire the electrical side so your heating equipment works year one and year ten. We coordinate with your HVAC contractor and verify amp draw under load.

About our Heating Systems service in Anchorage & the Mat-Su Valley

Mini-split disconnects, baseboard heat, snow-melt mats, heated floors, pipe-trace circuits, and roof de-icing — we wire the electrical side so your heating equipment works year one and year ten. We coordinate with your HVAC contractor and verify amp draw under load. Every heating systems job we take on begins with a real conversation — not a pitch. Paul or one of our licensed electricians walks the space, listens to what you actually need out of the work, and then translates that into a written scope with fair, itemized pricing. We do not upsell. We do not use scare tactics. We do not chase call volume. What we do is deliver heating systems work that will still look right, test right, and pass inspection years after we hand you the keys.

Quantum Wave Electric LLC is a locally owned Alaska electrical contractor headquartered in Anchorage and dispatching daily to Anchorage, Eagle River, Wasilla, Palmer, Chugiak, Big Lake, and the surrounding Mat-Su Valley communities. Our license, bonding, and insurance are current with the State of Alaska Department of Labor, and every electrician on our crew works under direct journeyman supervision. When you hire us for heating systems work, you are hiring the same people you talk to on the phone — not a rotating cast of subcontractors.

Why Heating Systems matters for Alaska homes and businesses

Heating Systems sits at the intersection of safety, comfort, and property value. Done well, it disappears into the background — outlets that work, breakers that hold, fixtures that dim without flicker, panels that feel warm-to-cool rather than hot to the touch, and paperwork that satisfies your insurance carrier when it is time to renew a policy or close a real estate transaction. Done poorly, it becomes the thing you notice every day and the thing that shows up in the inspector's report when you least want it to.

The stakes are higher in Alaska than they are in most of the Lower 48. Cold-weather cycling stresses conductors and connections; ground-frost heave pulls at outdoor conduit; wind and seismic events shake service masts loose; and the sheer number of hours we spend indoors during the dark season means our lighting, heat, and power systems have to work harder for longer. Sloppy heating systems work that would coast in a milder climate will surface as a callback here within a season or two.

That is why our approach to heating systems — mini-split heat pumps, heated floors & mats, pipe heat-trace circuits, roof & gutter de-icing, and everything else on the scope — starts from the assumption that the install has to survive Alaska. We size conductors with derate factors that account for conduit fill and ambient temperature; we torque every lug to manufacturer spec and log the value; we photograph terminations before we close covers; and we leave the panel schedule legible, so the next electrician who opens the door — even if that is fifteen years from now — knows exactly what they are looking at.

What to expect when you hire us for Heating Systems

Our heating systems process is intentionally short on surprises. It starts with the plan step, where we get on-site or on a video call, understand the scope, and identify anything about the existing system that will affect the work. From there we produce a written, itemized estimate — typically within one business day — so you can see exactly what the materials, labor, permit, and any subcontracted trades will cost before you commit.

Once you approve the estimate we handle permitting with the appropriate authority having jurisdiction — the Municipality of Anchorage in town, and the State Electrical Inspector's office for most Mat-Su work — and coordinate any utility disconnect windows with Chugach Electric or Matanuska Electric Association. Materials are staged the day before we mobilize so we are not making mid-job supply runs on your dime. On job day, our crew arrives on time, in uniform, and protects floors and finishes with drops and shoe covers.

We wrap every heating systems job with the verify step: a full walk-through where we test every device we touched, hand you photo documentation of the finished work, register any manufacturer warranties in your name, and answer questions until you are comfortable. We follow up in writing after the inspection closes so you have the permit signoff in your records. Callbacks are rare, but when they happen, they are covered — we do not charge to come back and correct our own work.

Cost, timing, and how we quote heating systems

The honest answer to "what does heating systems cost?" is that it depends on the scope — but we are transparent about the drivers. Labor hours, material grade, permit fees, whether we are working in finished walls or open framing, whether the panel has room for the new load or needs to be upgraded first, and whether the job requires any coordinated trades like drywall, insulation, or gas fitting all move the number. What we will not do is quote a suspiciously low price to win the job and then hit you with change orders on install day.

Most residential heating systems projects in our service area move from first call to final inspection inside two to four weeks. Emergency work is same-day or next-day. Larger commercial or new-construction heating systems scopes are scheduled against the general contractor's build calendar and typically span the rough-in and trim-out phases of the project. If your job has a hard deadline — closing date, tenant move-in, event date — tell us on the first call and we will structure the schedule around it.

We accept card, ACH, and check, with milestone billing on larger projects so you are only paying for work that is already in the wall. Financing referrals are available for panel and service upgrades that qualify. Any deposit we take is applied against the final invoice, not held in escrow, and it is refundable up to the point we order specialty materials on your behalf.

Alaska-specific heating systems considerations

Working on heating systems in Alaska means thinking about things that electricians in Arizona or Georgia simply do not deal with. Outdoor enclosures need to be rated for the actual temperature range they will see — not the marketing rating — and gasketed against wind-driven snow. Conduit runs across cold garages need to account for conductor derate. Grounding electrodes have to be driven deep enough to get below the seasonal frost line for reliable fault clearing. And any equipment that draws air for cooling — variable frequency drives, EV chargers, inverters — needs clearance and orientation planning that keeps snow off the vents.

Seismic activity is another factor we design around. The 2018 Anchorage earthquake was a useful reminder that gear which is not strapped, snubbed, or braced to code will move — and moved gear breaks conduit, opens splices, and takes down power. We install seismic bracing on heavy switchgear, use flexible conduit connections at equipment penetrations, and secure standby generators to their pads with the anchors the manufacturer specifies rather than the anchors that are cheapest.

Why homeowners and businesses choose Quantum Wave Electric for Heating Systems

We are not the biggest electrical contractor in Southcentral Alaska, and we do not want to be. We are the shop customers keep on speed dial because we answer the phone, we quote what we will actually charge, and we treat their homes and businesses like our own. Our reviews reflect that — real Alaskans describing real jobs, not curated marketing quotes — and our referral rate speaks louder than any advertisement.

Every heating systems job we complete is backed by a written workmanship warranty, and every material we install carries the full manufacturer warranty registered in your name. If something we did is not right, we come back and make it right. If something a previous electrician did shows up years later, we will tell you honestly whether it is on us or not, and we will quote the fix fairly either way.

Ready to talk about your heating systems project? Call us, request a written quote, or send photos of what you are working with. You will talk to a licensed electrician — not a call center — and you will get a straight answer about scope, cost, and timing. That is how we have built this business, and that is how we plan to keep growing it, one Alaska customer at a time.

What's included

  • Mini-split heat pumps
  • Heated floors & mats
  • Pipe heat-trace circuits
  • Roof & gutter de-icing
  • Electric baseboard heat
  • Snow-melt driveways

How it works

  1. Step 01
    Plan

    Sized circuits and conduit routing planned.

  2. Step 02
    Rough

    Conductors and disconnects pre-wired.

  3. Step 03
    Finish

    Thermostats and controls installed and tested.

  4. Step 04
    Verify

    Amperage draw confirmed under load.

Heating Systems by service area

Local pages with permit, climate, and response-time details for your area:

Frequently asked questions

Do cold-climate heat pumps actually work in Alaska?

Modern cold-climate Mitsubishi, Fujitsu, and Daikin units are rated to –13°F or lower and run efficiently through most Anchorage winters. We wire them so they perform at spec.

Can you wire roof de-icing cables?

Yes. We install constant-wattage or self-regulating heat cable circuits with controllers, ground-fault protection, and proper disconnects.

How much circuit capacity does a heated floor need?

Roughly 12 watts per square foot. Most bathrooms run on a single dedicated 15 or 20A circuit; whole-floor systems need dedicated 20–30A circuits sized to the mat or cable.

Ready when you are

Let's get the power flowing.

Same-day estimates across Anchorage and the Mat-Su Valley. Call the crew or request a written quote online.