DC master electrician bonds.
$275. Five minutes.

A DC electrical contractor designates a master electrician responsible for the work, and a regular voltage designated master electrician files a $2,000 bond under 17 DCMR § 210. Three percent of $2,000 is $60, so this lands at our $275 minimum — five minutes, no credit check.

Required for the regular voltage designated master electrician under 17 DCMR § 210
Fixed amount, fixed price — $2,000 bond, $275, no quote process
Statutory two-year term — DC electrical bonds expire November 30 of odd years
A-ratedA.M. Best carriersFastoften same purchase$275flat minimum
Trusted by industry leaders
NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
JLL
Triple Five
Georgetown
NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
JLL
Triple Five
Georgetown
How it works

Three steps. One sitting.

Electrical trade bonds are about the simplest thing in surety. Here's the entire process:

NOW · 5 MINUTES

Apply online

License and business details and an effective date. No financials, no credit check section, no follow-up.

MINUTES, USUALLY

Pay & e-sign

Small fixed-amount trade bonds like this are among the bond types that issue right after purchase. At most, 1–2 business days.

SAME DAY

File with the Board of Industrial Trades

Your executed electrical bond arrives by email, ready to file with the designated master electrician license. Wet-ink original mailed on request.

The whole pricing page.

$2,000 bond × 3% = $60, which is under our $275 minimum, so you pay $275 per term. Multi-year terms track the statutory renewal cycle.

1-year term
$275
2-year term
$275
3-year term
$275
About this bond

What it is and who needs it.

What the bond actually guarantees

The District licenses electrical work through the Board of Industrial Trades at DLCP. Under 17 DCMR § 210, an electrical contractor designates a master electrician responsible for the work, and that designated master files a separate bond — $2,000 for a regular voltage master electrician — alongside the contractor's $4,000 bond.

It's a three-party arrangement: the master electrician (the principal), the surety carrier, and the District (the obligee), with the public protected. The bond stands behind compliance with the District's electrical licensing and bonding rules.

It is not insurance for you — if the surety pays a valid claim, you repay the surety. DC electrical bonds run a two-year cycle and expire November 30 of the odd-numbered year; the bond must stay continuous for the license to stay valid, and we send renewal notices 60 and 30 days out.

17 DCMR § 210 (Bonding of Licensees)17 DCMR § 210 requires the designated master electrician for a DC electrical contractor to file a surety bond — $2,000 for a regular voltage master electrician (separate from the contractor's $4,000 bond). Bonds are filed with the Board of Industrial Trades / DLCP and expire November 30 of the odd-numbered year. Confirm the amount and class on your DLCP application.

You need this bond if you're

The designated master electrician for a DC regular voltage electrical contractor
Becoming a master a contractor is designating as responsible for the work
Renewing your master license and your current bond is expiring or non-renewing
Setting up a contracting entity that needs both a contractor and a designated-master bond

Five minutes. The whole thing.

These are the actual issuing fields — no credit check section, because this bond doesn't have one.

Start the application →
FAQs

Common questions.

If yours isn't here, the bond team can usually answer within the hour.

How much is the DC regular voltage master electrician bond? +
The premium is $275 — our flat minimum. Three percent of the $2,000 bond amount is $60, which falls under our $275 floor, so you pay $275. Same number for every master.
Do I pay the $2,000? +
No. You pay $275. The $2,000 is the surety's maximum liability if a valid claim is made — not a deposit, and nobody holds your money.
How is this different from the contractor bond? +
Under 17 DCMR § 210, the contractor files a $4,000 bond and the designated master electrician files a separate $2,000 bond. A licensed electrical business generally needs both; we write each one.
Is there a credit check? +
Not on this bond — the application has no credit section at all. Small fixed-amount trade bonds like this one don't need one.
When does it renew? +
DC electrical bonds run a two-year cycle and expire November 30 of the odd-numbered year. We send renewal notices 60 and 30 days out so it never lapses over a missed email.
Related bonds

Other New York bonds.

Finish your electrical license checklist today.

$275 flat, five-minute application, bond often issued in the same sitting. Free until issued.

Your premium @ 3%$275
Apply now →