Licensed Electrical Engineers in the United States.
Power distribution, controls, lighting, instrumentation, and commissioning. Search verified Professional Engineer (P.E.) records from state licensing boards.
America's directory for licensed electrical engineers.
Electrical engineers seal the drawings that bring buildings online — service entrances, distribution panels, transformer sizing, life-safety, and the controls that tie it all together. On the industrial side, electrical P.E.s design medium-voltage gear, motor control centers, and the SCADA infrastructure underneath modern facilities.
VectorCore aggregates live state-board records so you can verify license status, disciplines, and jurisdiction without leaving the page.
Use the marketplace to receive proposals from qualified electrical firms, or the AI Estimator for ROM cost and schedule before you scope your RFP.
Real licensed engineers, sourced from official boards
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Frequently asked questions
What does an electrical engineer do?+
Electrical engineers design power distribution, lighting, controls, instrumentation, low-voltage, and commissioning for buildings, infrastructure, and industrial facilities.
Do electrical engineers need a P.E. license?+
Yes for any electrical drawings submitted for permit or public work. Product, embedded, and RF design roles typically do not require licensure.
How do I verify an electrical P.E.?+
VectorCore queries state licensing boards in real time so you can confirm an engineer's status, license number, and disciplines before signing a contract.
What's the difference between electrical and electronics engineering?+
Electrical engineering deals with power, distribution, and large-scale systems. Electronics engineering focuses on circuits, semiconductors, and signal-level design.
Can I find an electrical engineer in a specific state?+
Yes — filter by state to see only engineers actively licensed in that jurisdiction.