No Power to Whole Property in Wyoming
If your whole Wyoming property has lost power but the street still has it, that is a Level 2 fault, not your switchboard. Electrician Wyoming responds same-day, backed by Lic #451348C and 300+ five-star reviews.
- Same-Day & 24/7 Emergency: We treat a total property outage as urgent, every time.
- Level 2 ASP Accredited: Licensed to work on the Ausgrid network, most electricians can't.
- 300+ Five-Star Reviews: Trusted across Wyoming and the Central Coast.
- $0 Call-Out & Free Quotes: No cost to inspect, fixed pricing before repairs start.
What No Power to the Whole Property Actually Means
This catches homeowners out: the wiring between the street or pole and your meter, called the service mains, is only legal for a Level 2 ASP to touch. If the street has power and your home doesn't, the fault sits there, not inside your switchboard.

Common Causes of No Power to the Whole Property in Wyoming
A fault in the service mains
The overhead cable carrying power from the street to your meter box has failed, often from age, corrosion, or storm damage near Wyoming Creek.
A failed point of attachment
The bracket where the service line attaches to your house has come loose or broken, cutting the connection even though the street supply is fine.
A fault at the main network connection
The connection point where Ausgrid's network meets your property has failed, requiring a Level 2 ASP to inspect and repair or coordinate with the network.
Ageing connections on older Wyoming homes
Many properties off Maidens Brush Road and Chamberlain Road still carry original service connections from the suburb's 1960s-1980s build-out, now decades old.
A lost neutral or loose connection
A loose or corroded neutral connection at the point of attachment can cut supply to the whole property even though voltage is still present in the street.
A network-side fault at the connection
Occasionally the fault sits right at the boundary where Ausgrid's network meets your property, still needing a Level 2 ASP to diagnose and liaise on your behalf.
Is No Power to the Whole Property Dangerous?
Yes, treat it seriously. A fault at the service mains or connection point can involve live or damaged wiring near your home, and this is squarely Level 2 territory, not a DIY fix.
- Never touch the meter box, service line, or connection point yourself
- A live low or damaged line near the house is a genuine shock risk
- This always needs a Level 2 ASP, not a general switchboard reset

What To Do Right Now
A few safe checks help us understand the fault before we arrive, without putting you at risk:
- Check whether neighbouring homes still have power, to confirm it's isolated to yours.
- Do not touch the meter box, service line, or any external wiring yourself.
- Keep clear of any sagging or fallen wires near the house or yard.
- Turn off major appliances at the wall so nothing surges when power returns.
- Call a licensed Level 2 ASP (Lic #451348C) to inspect the service mains and connection.

When To Call a Level 2 ASP for No Power to the Property in Wyoming
- The street clearly still has power but your home is completely dead
- The switchboard shows no fault but the whole property is still out
- You can see a damaged, loose, or sagging service line near the house
- The outage started after a storm or heavy rain along Wyoming Creek
- Neighbours confirm their own power is unaffected
This is a Level 2 job, not a switchboard issue. We respond same-day and 24/7, with $0 call-out and free quotes. See our service mains and network connections work.

How it works
How We Fix No Power to the Whole Property in Wyoming
Fault Finding
We trace the fault from the meter box back to the point of attachment and service mains, confirming exactly where the connection has failed.
Upfront Quote
Once the fault is confirmed, you get a fixed, transparent price before any repair work begins, no surprises later.
The Service Mains Repair
We repair or replace the damaged service mains or connection, work only a Level 2 ASP is licensed to carry out on the Ausgrid network.
Testing & Reconnection
We test the full connection and safely restore power, confirming everything meets AS/NZS 3000 before we leave your Wyoming property.
Why This Is Common in Older Wyoming Homes
Original service connections on Wyoming's 1960s-1980s brick-veneer stock near Renwick Street are decades old, making them more fault-prone than newer builds in Springfield.

No Power Faults and Related Electrical Issues Across Wyoming
No power to the property often relates to a sagging service line or storm-damaged mains. We fix all three across Wyoming, Gosford, and Lisarow.

No Power to Your Wyoming Property? Call Now
Call (02) 4072 9996 for urgent same-day help, 24/7 for emergencies, with $0 call-out and free quotes, backed by Lic #451348C. If it sparks, shorts, flickers or fails, we can fix it.
Common questions
No Power to Whole Property FAQs
The real questions Wyoming homeowners ask when the whole property has gone dark.
Is losing power to the whole property dangerous?
It can be. A fault at the service mains or connection point can involve live, damaged wiring, so treat it seriously and call a Level 2 ASP rather than investigating it yourself.
What causes a whole property to lose power while the street still has it?
A fault in the service mains, the point of attachment, or the main network connection is the usual cause, not the switchboard, which is why a Level 2 ASP is needed.
What should I do if my whole property has no power?
Check whether neighbouring homes still have power, avoid touching the meter box or any external wiring, and call a licensed Level 2 ASP to inspect the connection.
Do I need an electrician to fix this, or should I call the network?
A Level 2 ASP handles the service mains and connection directly, which is faster than waiting on the network provider, and we can liaise with Ausgrid if needed.
How much does it cost to fix no power to a whole property?
It depends on the fault, but every job starts with a free quote and fixed upfront pricing, plus a $0 call-out fee, so you know the cost before we start.
Is this a common issue in older Wyoming homes?
Yes. Original service connections on Wyoming's 1960s-1980s housing stock are decades old and more prone to faults than newer connections.