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10 Electrical Contractors Running the Most Facebook Ads in 2026 (Speed Audit)

Pipeline Research Team
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The top 10 electrical Facebook advertisers in June 2026 run between 10 and 64 active ads each, with Edelman Heating Cooling Plumbing Electric & Solar, Sylvester Electric, and Bowers Plumbing and Remodel leading the field. Electrical has the slowest landing pages in home service at 11.29 seconds average mobile LCP — 4.5x Google's 2.5s Core Web Vitals threshold and worse than every other audited trade. Pixel adoption is also the lowest at 14.0%, and only 1 of 143 electrical advertisers uses a dedicated landing page. The dataset is from PipelineOn's home service Meta ad research tool covering 143 US electrical advertisers running 647 live ads in June 2026.

Key Takeaways

  • Electrical has the slowest avg mobile LCP of any home service trade at 11.29 seconds — 4.5x Google's 2.5s Core Web Vitals threshold and slower than HVAC, roofing, plumbing, solar, garage doors, lawn, and pest control
  • Edelman leads with 64 active ads, followed by Sylvester Electric at 33 and Bowers Plumbing and Remodel at 30 — the top 10 average 26.4 active ads each
  • Meta Pixel adoption among electrical advertisers is 14.0% (20 of 143) — the lowest of any home service trade
  • Only 1 of 143 electrical advertisers (0.7%) uses a dedicated landing page — the lowest rate of any trade
  • 50.4% of electrical landing pages score Poor (>8s) on mobile — Stilwell Generators tops out at 52.7 seconds, slower than the entire dataset

Electrical contractors have the slowest Facebook ad landing pages in home service. 11.29 seconds average mobile LCP across 137 audited electricians — slower than HVAC, roofing, plumbing, solar, garage doors, lawn care, and pest control. That’s 4.5x Google’s 2.5-second Core Web Vitals threshold for a Good LCP.

PipelineOn audited every active US electrical Facebook advertiser on the Meta Ads Library in June 2026 — 143 companies running 647 live ads with mobile speed scoring on 137 landing pages. The result: 50.4% of electrical pages score Poor (>8s), Pixel adoption sits at 14.0% (lowest of any trade), and only 1 of 143 advertisers uses a dedicated landing page.

Below: the 10 electrical companies running the most Facebook ads for electricians in June 2026, ranked by active ad count. For each one, mobile LCP, destination, and tracking stack — so you can compare your own setup against the top of the field.

Scoreboard: top 10 electrical Facebook advertisers in June 2026

#CompanyActive adsDestinationMobile LCPMeta Pixel
1Edelman Heating, Cooling, Plumbing, Electric & Solar64Home page7.5 sYes
2Sylvester Electric33Other website page11.3 sNo
3Bowers Plumbing and Remodel30Facebook instant form1.3 sNo
4Fuller Electrical Contractors, Inc.27Home page13.1 sYes
5Ohmvolt23Contact/booking page10.0 sYes
6Constellation Home20Contact/booking page6.3 sNo
7ABC Plumbing, Sewer, Heating, Cooling and Electric19Dedicated landing page12.1 sNo
8Mutt’s Electric18Facebook instant form2.6 sNo
9Arc Angel Electric15Facebook instant form6.7 sNo
10Saiyan Electric Inc.15No button / no link10.1 sNo

1. Edelman Heating, Cooling, Plumbing, Electric & Solar — 64 active ads

Edelman runs 64 active Facebook ads as of June 2026 — the highest single-advertiser count in the electrical trade and the same operator that also leads the solar audit at position #2.

Ads send to the home page at ev.edelmanhomeservices.com. Mobile LCP is 7.5 seconds, putting the page in the Slow bucket just under the Poor threshold. The home-page choice means homeowners arriving from an electrical ad hit a generic services menu rather than a panel-upgrade or EV-charger offer.

The tracking stack is GA4 plus Meta Pixel. No CAPI, no lead recovery. A Pixel firing on a 7.5s page is leaking events because mobile users bounce before the script finishes loading.

What they’re doing right: dominant ad volume, Pixel installed, multi-trade leverage across solar and electrical. What they’re missing: an electrical-specific landing page, CAPI, faster mobile load.

2. Sylvester Electric — 33 active ads

Sylvester Electric runs 33 active ads pointing at a generic page on sylvesterelectric.com.

Mobile LCP is 11.3 seconds — Poor bucket and nearly identical to the category average of 11.29 seconds. The page is functionally broken on mobile for the first 11 seconds after click.

Tracking is GTM and GA4. No Meta Pixel, no CAPI. That’s the #2 advertiser in the trade running 33 ads with zero conversion data flowing back to Meta — the auction is optimizing on raw clicks, not on quote requests.

What they’re doing right: consistent ad volume in their market. What they’re missing: every layer of attribution and an LCP under 3 seconds.

3. Bowers Plumbing and Remodel — 30 active ads

Bowers Plumbing and Remodel is the outlier of the electrical top 10. 30 active ads on a 1.3-second mobile page — the only top-10 electrical advertiser inside the Fast (<2.5s) Core Web Vitals threshold.

Ads send to a Facebook instant form, which keeps traffic inside Meta and bypasses the speed advantage on the website. But the fast site means every organic visit, every referral, and every direct-traffic homeowner converts at a higher rate than competitors with 11-second pages.

Tracking is GTM, GA4, and Microsoft Clarity. Clarity gives Bowers session-recording data almost no electrical competitor has. No Meta Pixel, no CAPI — the only weak link in an otherwise textbook setup.

What they’re doing right: fastest mobile site in the top 10, Clarity for diagnostics, instant-form destination matched to volume goals. What they’re missing: install a Pixel and CPL drops inside two weeks.

4. Fuller Electrical Contractors, Inc. — 27 active ads

Fuller Electrical Contractors runs 27 active ads sending traffic to the home page at fullerelectricalinc.com.

Mobile LCP is 13.1 seconds — Poor bucket and 5.6 seconds slower than Edelman at the top of the list. The home-page destination plus a 13-second load means homeowners see a blank screen before they ever see Fuller’s branding, services menu, or phone number.

Tracking is GA4 plus Meta Pixel. The Pixel is installed but firing on a 13-second page captures a fraction of the events it would on a 2-second page.

What they’re doing right: Pixel installed, consistent volume. What they’re missing: any mobile optimization at all on the landing page.

5. Ohmvolt — 23 active ads

Ohmvolt runs 23 active ads pointing at a contact/booking page on a GoHighLevel-style subdomain (ohmvoltghl.com).

Mobile LCP is 10.0 seconds — Poor bucket. The contact-page destination is the right structural call, but the speed undercuts most of it.

Tracking is GTM, GA4, and Meta Pixel. No CAPI, no lead recovery. The GHL-style funnel page means Ohmvolt has at least set up a structured booking flow, which is more than most of this list.

What they’re doing right: contact-page destination, Pixel installed, funnel-style infrastructure. What they’re missing: a sub-3-second load and CAPI to offset iOS signal loss.

6. Constellation Home — 20 active ads

Constellation Home runs 20 active ads through a DoubleClick redirect, ultimately landing on a contact/booking page.

Mobile LCP is 6.3 seconds — Slow bucket but well below the category average. The DoubleClick chain adds latency and complicates Pixel attribution.

Tracking is GTM and GA4 only. No Meta Pixel — surprising for a regional brand the size of Constellation, and the kind of gap a single-day implementation closes.

What they’re doing right: above-average page speed, contact-page destination logic. What they’re missing: a Pixel and a cleaner direct-link redirect chain.

7. ABC Plumbing, Sewer, Heating, Cooling and Electric — 19 active ads

ABC Plumbing is the single advertiser in the entire 143-company electrical audit using a true dedicated landing page. 1 of 143. 0.7%.

The page sits on 4abc.com and runs 19 active ads. Mobile LCP is 12.1 seconds — Poor bucket, despite the dedicated-LP structure. The architecture is the right call; the execution is not.

Tracking bucket is “No visible tracking.” No GA4, no Pixel, nothing. Running a dedicated landing page with no conversion tracking is the worst-case attribution scenario: the structural advantage of a focused page is paired with zero learning loop for Meta.

What they’re doing right: the only electrician committing to dedicated landing pages in the whole trade. What they’re missing: speed and any tracking layer to make the LP investment pay off.

8. Mutt’s Electric — 18 active ads

Mutt’s Electric runs 18 active ads through a Facebook instant form. Mobile LCP on the website is 2.6 seconds — Okay bucket, just outside the Fast threshold.

Mutt’s is a multi-trade operator that also appears in the solar audit. Combined electrical and solar campaigns run under one ad account, which gives the algorithm more conversion volume per Pixel than a single-trade shop.

GA4 only on tracking. No Meta Pixel, no CAPI. A 2.6-second page with no Pixel is a missed compound — the speed advantage doesn’t get fed back to Meta.

What they’re doing right: second-fastest top-10 page, instant-form destination, multi-trade leverage. What they’re missing: install the Pixel today.

9. Arc Angel Electric — 15 active ads

Arc Angel Electric runs 15 active ads through a Facebook instant form, with the website at arcangelelectric.com as the fallback.

Mobile LCP is 6.7 seconds — Slow bucket. Because ads send to an instant form, the speed cost only hits organic and direct visitors, not paid traffic.

Tracking is GTM and GA4. No Meta Pixel, no CAPI. With instant-form ads and no Pixel, Meta can’t tie form fills to website behavior or feed any retargeting audience.

What they’re doing right: instant-form destination for friction-free CPL. What they’re missing: Pixel and a website fast enough that organic visitors don’t bounce.

10. Saiyan Electric Inc. — 15 active ads

Saiyan Electric runs 15 active ads with no button and no link on the ad creative itself — homeowners are pushed to engage in-comment or message the page directly.

The website link points at a Google Maps location for their Downey, CA address. Mobile LCP on the linked page is 10.1 seconds — Poor bucket. The Maps-link approach skips the website entirely as a conversion surface.

GA4 only on tracking. No Meta Pixel. The no-link-no-button ad format is unusual for a top-10 advertiser — it’s a brand and call-volume play, not a measurable conversion funnel.

What they’re doing right: local Maps targeting matches a service-area business model. What they’re missing: any way to attribute calls back to ad spend.

Patterns across the top 10

Five patterns repeat across the highest-volume electrical Facebook advertisers in June 2026.

The top 10 averages 26.4 active ads each, vs a category mean of 4.5 ads per advertiser. That’s a 5.8x volume gap between top-10 advertisers and the median electrician. Below 8-10 active creatives in flight, you’re competing in a different weight class than the leaders.

Pixel adoption among the top 10 is 4 of 10 — well above the category-wide 14.0%. Top-volume advertisers are more likely to have at least minimum attribution maturity, but four of ten still leaves Edelman, Fuller, Ohmvolt, and ABC carrying the entire Pixel load among leaders. The other six are flying blind.

Mobile speed is broken across the top 10. Average LCP across the 9 measurable advertisers is 8.95 seconds, and only Bowers Plumbing at 1.3s clears the Fast bucket. Five of the 10 score Poor (>8s). The category-wide electrical average is 11.29 seconds across 137 scored pages.

Destination split is dominated by website pages and instant forms. Three of the top 10 send to a website page (home or other), three send to a contact/booking page, three send to Facebook instant forms, one uses no link, and one (ABC) uses a dedicated landing page. Call Now CTAs don’t appear in the top 10 even though 14.7% of all electricians use them.

Multi-trade operators run heavier than single-trade specialists. Edelman (electrical + solar + HVAC + plumbing), Bowers (plumbing + electrical), Constellation (HVAC + electrical), Mutt’s (electrical + solar), and ABC (everything) all appear in the top 10. Multi-trade operators get more leverage from a single ad account, Pixel, and creative library than single-trade shops do.

Why electrical is the slowest trade on Facebook ad landing pages

Electrical sits at 11.29 seconds average mobile LCP. Roofing is 10.41s. Solar is 10.20s. HVAC is 9.4s. Lawn care and pest control land in the mid-7s. Electrical is the slowest trade by a wider margin than any other gap in the dataset.

Three drivers explain it. First, electrical has the lowest average digital marketing maturity of any home service trade. Many top-10 electricians run sites built on older WordPress themes, dropped into hosting accounts without image compression, lazy-load, or a CDN. Generator and panel-upgrade brochures are heavy: hero images at 2-4MB, multiple product PDFs embedded, and no critical-CSS inlining.

Second, generator and panel-upgrade specialists are dragging the average. Stilwell Generators clocks 52.7 seconds — among the slowest pages in the entire home service dataset. Myrtle Beach Generators is 47.8s. Copeland Heating Air Conditioning Plumbing and Electrical Repair Services is 45.8s. Logo Electrical Services is 42.7s. Ready Power is 39.4s. Five electrical pages over 39 seconds on mobile, all loading heavy product imagery on unoptimized servers.

Third, Pixel adoption is the lowest in the audit at 14.0%. 20 of 143 electrical advertisers fire a Pixel. That’s the punchline: the trade hasn’t bought into performance attribution, so speed isn’t a tracked metric. If you don’t measure CPL by landing-page variant, you don’t optimize speed. The cycle is self-reinforcing.

The Bowers Plumbing exception

Bowers Plumbing and Remodel runs 30 active ads on a 1.3-second mobile page. They are the only top-10 electrical advertiser hitting the Fast bucket, and the contrast with the rest of the list is the entire case study.

Bowers’s site is built clean — GTM, GA4, and Microsoft Clarity on a lightweight page. No bloated WordPress theme. No 4MB hero image. No 30+ JavaScript files. The infrastructure is simpler than what Edelman, Sylvester, or Fuller are running, and it loads in roughly 1/10 the time.

Speed is achievable in this trade. Bowers proves it on a top-10-volume budget. The rest of the electrical field just hasn’t done the work. If you’re competing against Sylvester Electric on Facebook ads in their market, a 1.3-second page is a quote-cost advantage you can ship in a week.

What this means if you’re running Facebook ads for electricians

Five moves, each tied to a number from the audit.

  • Get LCP under 2.5 seconds before adding ad budget. Refined Electrical Services hits 0.8s mobile. Bann Home Electrical & Heat Pump Services runs 1.1s. Bowers, Stottbrotherselectric, and SwarmSystem all clear sub-2-second mobile loads. A clean Webflow, Astro, or static-HTML build closes the gap in days, and CPL typically drops 30-50% in the first month after launch.
  • Install Pixel + CAPI. Only 14.0% of electricians fire a Pixel and only 1.4% run CAPI. Adding both gives Meta server-side conversion data the iOS 14.5+ browser signal can’t deliver alone. The trade-wide low adoption means this is an immediate competitive edge, not table stakes.
  • Stop sending to the home page. Build a contact/booking page with the phone number, address, and a 30-second form above the fold. 18.9% of electricians send to the home page — the wrong destination for paid traffic. Generic services menus convert at a fraction of the rate of a focused contact page.
  • Match the top-10 volume floor. The top 10 average 26.4 active ads each, and the median electrician runs around 3. Below 8-10 active creatives in rotation, the Meta algorithm has too few variants to learn from. Adding creative variety is cheaper than adding budget.
  • Test Call Now ads. 14.7% of electricians use Call Now CTAs — the second-highest rate of any trade after garage doors. Electrical service-call buyers convert on calls at 3-4x the rate of form fills, especially for emergency panel, generator, and EV-charger work where they need a real conversation before commitment. None of the top 10 use Call Now, leaving the lane wide open for any electrician willing to test it against forms.

For Facebook ads for electricians, the speed and tracking gap is the lever. The rest of the trade is slower, less Pixel-mature, and less landing-page focused than any home service category. Anyone willing to fix those three things ships a competitive edge that compounds on every dollar of ad spend.

For the dataset behind this post and the ability to filter by ZIP, market, or competitor list, the PipelineOn home service Meta ad research tool is the source.

Methodology

Source: PipelineOn home service Meta ad research tool. Sample: 143 active US electrical Facebook advertisers running 647 total live ads on the Meta Ads Library as of June 2026. PageSpeed data via Google PageSpeed Insights (mobile profile) covering 137 of the 143 advertisers. Tracking stack detection via landing-page DOM and request analysis. Full dataset and filter tool: /tools/home-service-meta-ad-research/.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which electrical contractor runs the most Facebook ads in June 2026?

Edelman Heating, Cooling, Plumbing, Electric & Solar runs 64 active Facebook and Instagram ads as of June 2026, the most of any US electrical advertiser. Sylvester Electric is second at 33 ads, followed by Bowers Plumbing and Remodel at 30, Fuller Electrical Contractors at 27, and Ohmvolt at 23. The top 10 electrical advertisers average 26.4 active ads each.

How many US electrical contractors are running Facebook ads right now?

PipelineOn audited 143 active US electrical Facebook advertisers running 647 total live ads on the Meta Ads Library in June 2026. Mobile PageSpeed scoring covers 137 of the 143 landing pages. The top 10 advertisers account for 264 ads, or roughly 41% of total live electrical ad inventory.

What's the average cost per lead for electrical Facebook ads?

Public benchmarks for electrical Facebook ad CPL typically land between $40 and $120 depending on service mix, market, and offer. LocaliQ's 2025 home services search-advertising benchmarks put electrical CPL on the higher end of paid channels because ticket sizes ($300-$3,000) sit between HVAC and plumbing. Speed and Pixel maturity swing those numbers significantly — both of which electrical advertisers in this dataset largely fail on.

How fast should an electrician's Facebook ad landing page load?

Google's Core Web Vitals threshold for a Good Largest Contentful Paint is under 2.5 seconds on mobile. Across 137 electrical landing pages scored in this audit, only 9 (6.6%) clear that bar. Refined Electrical Services tops the list at 0.8 seconds, and Stilwell Generators bottoms out at 52.7 seconds.

Why are electrical contractors slower on Facebook ad infrastructure than other trades?

Three reasons. Electrical has the lowest digital marketing maturity of any trade on average — many top-10 sites run aging WordPress themes with unoptimized hero images and generator brochures. Second, generator and panel-upgrade specialists like Stilwell Generators (52.7s) and Myrtle Beach Generators (47.8s) load heavy product pages without mobile compression. Third, Pixel adoption is the lowest of any trade at 14.0%, which means speed isn't a tracked metric in most electrical ad accounts.

Is the Meta Pixel essential for electrical contractors running Facebook ads?

Yes, especially for higher-ticket panel upgrades, generator installs, and EV charger work. Without the Pixel, Meta optimizes on raw clicks rather than booked appointments, which inflates CPL and wastes spend on low-intent traffic. Only 14.0% of electrical advertisers currently fire the Pixel — the lowest rate in home service, and a wide-open lane for any electrician willing to install it.