Aluminum Wiring Risk: A Hidden Hazard in Suffolk County Pre-1973 Homes

Aluminum Wiring in Long Island Homes: How to Identify the Risk, Repair It, and Protect Your Insurance

Suffolk County, United States – May 10, 2026 / RJ & Son Electric /

Aluminum Wiring Risk: Suffolk County Electrician on a Hidden Hazard in  Pre-1973 Homes

For thousands of Suffolk County homeowners living in homes built during the late 1960s and early 1970s construction boom on Long Island, an electrical safety issue is hiding inside the walls, and most of them  have no idea it is there. The issue is aluminum branch-circuit wiring, used widely in U.S. residential  construction during the period when copper prices spiked, and identified by the U.S. Consumer Product  Safety Commission as a documented fire hazard when it has not been properly remediated. According to RJ & Son Electric, a licensed Master Electrician serving Suffolk County, aluminum-wired homes are not a  death sentence. They are a known issue that homeowners need to understand, identify, and address  through one of the two repair methods the CPSC formally recognizes.

How Aluminum Wiring Ended Up in Long Island Homes

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the price of copper rose sharply. The residential construction industry, under pressure to control costs in a period of rapid suburban expansion, adopted aluminum as a lower cost alternative for branch-circuit wiring (the wiring that runs from the panel to outlets, switches, and  light fixtures in each room). Aluminum’s introduction to residential branch wiring came primarily during  the period from approximately 1965 through 1973, although exact start and end dates varied by builder  and region.

Long Island’s suburban construction boom overlapped directly with this period. Subdivisions across  Suffolk County built during the late 1960s and early 1970s, covering communities including parts of  Centereach, Miller Place, Rocky Point, Selden, parts of Smithtown, and similar developments, were  candidates for aluminum branch-circuit wiring at the time of construction. Older homes, including the

original Levittown developments built in the late 1940s and 1950s, predate the aluminum era and were  almost universally wired in copper. Newer homes built from the mid-1970s onward also typically  returned to copper as the industry recognized the issues with aluminum.

The result is a specific Suffolk County housing-stock fingerprint: pre-1965 homes are generally copper,  post-1973 homes are generally copper, and homes built in the roughly eight-year aluminum window are

the population at risk. A licensed electrician can confirm aluminum wiring during an inspection by  examining the conductor color (aluminum is a dull silver-grey, copper is a distinctive reddish-orange)  and the insulation markings (aluminum cable is typically marked “AL,” “ALUM,” or “ALUMINUM” along  the sheathing).

What the CPSC Actually Found About Aluminum Wiring

The headline statistic on aluminum wiring risk is one that homeowners hear repeated and often without  proper context. Here is the actual finding:

A U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission-commissioned study conducted by Franklin Research  Institute determined that homes built before 1972 and wired with aluminum branch circuits are 55  times more likely to have one or more wire connections at outlets reach “fire hazard conditions”  compared to homes wired with copper. The CPSC issued a formal safety alert in 1974 and has  subsequently published a comprehensive guidance document (CPSC Publication 516, “Repairing  Aluminum Wiring”) that remains the authoritative reference for homeowners and electricians dealing  with the issue.

The mechanism behind the risk is metallurgical. Aluminum and copper expand and contract at different  rates with temperature changes, and aluminum oxidizes when exposed to air to form a non-conductive  surface layer. When aluminum branch-circuit wiring is connected to copper-clad outlet and switch  terminals (which were standard during the aluminum-wiring era), the temperature cycling that occurs  every time the circuit is loaded and unloaded loosens the connection over time. Loose connections build up resistance, generate heat, and create the conditions for arcing, an electrical discharge between  separated conductors that produces extreme localized temperatures and is one of the leading ignition  sources for residential electrical fires.

Critically, the CPSC finding does not mean that 1-in-55 aluminum-wired homes will burn down. It means  that the rate of fire-hazard-level connection conditions is 55 times higher in aluminum-wired homes  than in copper-wired homes. Most aluminum-wired homes never experience a fire. The elevated rate of  hazardous conditions still makes the population a clear concern for proactive remediation.

How to Identify Aluminum Wiring in a Suffolk County Home

A homeowner who suspects aluminum wiring should not start opening outlets and switches to  investigate. Live electrical work is dangerous for the homeowner, and any disturbance of an aluminum  connection can accelerate the loose-connection failure mode the homeowner is trying to avoid.  Identification is best handled by a licensed electrician during a scheduled inspection.

Indicators a Suffolk County homeowner can look for without opening any electrical equipment include:

Year of construction: Homes built between approximately 1965 and 1973 are in the at-risk window.  Year-of-build is recorded in property records and is often available through the Suffolk County tax  assessor.

Visible cable markings: Where electrical cable is visible (in basements, crawl spaces, attics, or unfinished  garage areas), the sheathing is marked with conductor type. Cable marked “ALUMINUM,” “AL,” or  “ALUM” is aluminum branch-circuit wiring. Cable marked “COPPER” or “CU” or unmarked but with the  conductor visible is typically copper.

Outlet and switch behavior: Outlets that flicker, feel warm to the touch, or show discoloration around  the receptacle face can indicate loose aluminum connections. Switches that feel warm during operation  or that crackle when used are similar signals. Any of these conditions warrants prompt evaluation by a  licensed electrician, not a homeowner DIY repair.

Insurance company correspondence: Some insurers, when they identify an aluminum-wired home  during a routine review, will contact the homeowner to request remediation as a condition of continued coverage. This is increasingly common and provides another signal that the home may be in the at-risk  population.

The Two CPSC-Approved Repair Methods

The CPSC has formally recognized two repair methods for aluminum branch-circuit wiring: COPALUM  and AlumiConn. Both methods leave the existing aluminum wiring in the walls and address the issue at  the connection points (outlets, switches, and junction boxes), where the failure mechanism originates.  Both methods are the only repairs the CPSC currently considers acceptable as a permanent fix.

COPALUM

COPALUM is a crimp-connection system originally developed by AMP (now TE Connectivity). The repair  involves connecting a short copper “pigtail” to each aluminum conductor using a specialized crimp tool  that produces an extremely high-pressure, oxidation-resistant bond. The copper pigtails then connect to

the outlet, switch, or fixture using standard copper-compatible terminals. The COPALUM crimp tool is  large, expensive, and requires manufacturer certification to operate, which limits the number of  electricians qualified to perform the repair. In some regions of the country, COPALUM-certified  technicians are not available within reasonable proximity, which has driven the development and  adoption of the alternative method.

AlumiConn

AlumiConn is a connector developed by King Innovation that produces a CPSC-recognized repair without requiring specialized crimp tooling. The connector uses set-screws to terminate the aluminum and  copper conductors in separate compartments, with an internal anti-oxidant compound that protects the aluminum termination. AlumiConn is approved by the CPSC and is significantly more accessible than  COPALUM because it does not require the specialized tooling and certification.

Cost comparison and per-outlet pricing: Both methods price out at approximately $50 to $60 per outlet,  switch, or light fixture connection. AlumiConn tends to be slightly less expensive per connection because of the tool and certification differences. Industry pricing in early 2026 places per-receptacle and per switch repair work in the range of $35 to $55, with full-circuit remediation at approximately $395 to  $476.

What a Complete Aluminum Wiring Remediation Costs

For a typical three-bedroom Suffolk County home with aluminum branch-circuit wiring, complete CPSC approved remediation using AlumiConn or COPALUM connectors at every outlet, switch, and junction  box typically costs between $3,500 and $6,000. Larger homes with more circuits, more outlets, and  more complex wiring runs can run higher. The remediation is generally completed in 2 to 5 days of  electrician work depending on home size and accessibility, with the home remaining occupied  throughout the project (the work is performed circuit-by-circuit, with each circuit briefly de-energized  only during the connection upgrade).

The cost should be evaluated against three financial alternatives, which together make remediation the  clear choice for most affected Suffolk County homeowners:

Doing nothing: Maintains the elevated fire-hazard-condition rate documented by CPSC, exposes the  homeowner to potential insurance non-renewal or claim denial in the event of a fire, and reduces the  home’s marketability when sold.

Full rewiring with copper: Replaces all aluminum wiring throughout the home with copper. Provides  maximum protection but typically costs $8,000 to $15,000 or more for a typical Suffolk County home,  plus drywall and finish-restoration work in many areas of the house. Reserved for homes with  widespread other electrical issues or for buyers who require it as a condition of sale.

CPSC-approved connector remediation: $3,500 to $6,000, leaves the existing aluminum wiring in place  and addresses only the connection points where the failure mechanism originates. Recognized by CPSC,  accepted by most insurers, and significantly less disruptive than full rewiring.

For most affected homeowners, the connector-based remediation strikes the right balance between  safety and cost.

The Insurance and Home-Sale Reality

Beyond the underlying safety issue, aluminum wiring increasingly affects two practical aspects of  homeownership for affected Suffolk County families.

Homeowner’s insurance: Insurers vary in their treatment of aluminum-wired homes. Some carriers will  not write new policies on homes with un-remediated aluminum branch-circuit wiring. Others will write  the policy but at higher premiums or with specific exclusions. A growing number of carriers, when they  identify aluminum wiring during a routine review, contact the homeowner with a remediation

requirement attached to a renewal deadline. CPSC-approved remediation (COPALUM or AlumiConn)  generally satisfies these requirements; full rewiring also satisfies them but is rarely required in lieu of  the connector remediation.

Home sales: The buyer’s home inspector will identify aluminum wiring during the standard inspection  process. Buyers and their financing institutions increasingly require either CPSC-approved remediation  as a condition of sale or a price concession to fund post-purchase remediation. Sellers who address the  issue proactively before listing avoid the negotiation friction and typically realize a stronger sale price  than sellers who let the issue surface during inspection.

For Suffolk County homeowners in the at-risk construction window who plan to sell within the next two  to five years, proactive remediation is generally the right financial choice. The cost is recovered (and  often exceeded) through smoother negotiations and a faster sale.

Frequently Asked Questions About Aluminum Wiring Remediation

Is aluminum wiring illegal in New York?

No. Existing aluminum branch-circuit wiring installed under code at the time of original construction is grandfathered. However, modern code and modern best practice  strongly favor remediation, and any new electrical work performed in an aluminum-wired home  requires connections that meet current standards.

How do I know which connector method I need?

Both COPALUM and AlumiConn are CPSC-approved and produce equivalent safety outcomes. The choice typically comes down to which method the licensed  electrician offers in your service area. RJ & Son Electric will recommend the method best suited to your  specific home and situation during the evaluation.

Can I replace the outlets and switches myself with copper-rated devices to fix the issue?

No. Replacing  the outlet face does not address the underlying aluminum-to-copper connection failure mode. The  CPSC-approved repairs work by adding a copper pigtail at each connection that is bonded to the  aluminum conductor with the correct method. Self-installed outlet replacements typically introduce  new connection failures rather than resolving the existing ones, and do not satisfy CPSC, insurer, or  home-sale standards.

Will my insurance company be notified that I had aluminum wiring remediated?

Most insurers welcome  documentation of CPSC-approved remediation work. Your licensed electrician provides documentation  of the specific connector method used and a circuit-by-circuit record of the work performed. This  documentation is what insurers, home buyers, and inspectors look for as evidence that the home has  been remediated.

How long does aluminum wiring remediation take?

A typical three-bedroom Suffolk County home is  remediated in 2 to 5 working days, depending on the number of circuits, the number of outlets and  switches, and the accessibility of the wiring. The work is performed with the home occupied throughout, with individual circuits briefly de-energized only during connection upgrades.

Schedule an Aluminum Wiring Evaluation

Suffolk County homeowners in homes built between approximately 1965 and 1973, homeowners who  have received insurance correspondence regarding aluminum wiring, and homeowners preparing to list  their home for sale should all schedule a professional aluminum wiring evaluation. RJ & Son Electric  provides identification, evaluation, and CPSC-approved remediation services across Smithtown,  Setauket, Selden, Stony Brook, Port Jefferson Station, Centereach, Miller Place, Rocky Point, Wading  River, East Setauket, Shoreham, Poquott, Nissequogue, and The Hamptons. All work is performed by a  licensed Master Electrician with documentation provided for insurance and home-sale purposes. Call  (631) 833-7663 or visit rjandsonelectric.com.

Contact Information:

RJ & Son Electric

Suffolk County
Suffolk County, NY 11705
United States

Richard Gruttola
+1-631-833-7663
https://rjandsonelectric.com