Hiring Greek contractors from abroad.
Plumbers, electricians, pest control, locksmiths — finding, hiring and paying tradespeople for a Greek property when you're not there. What's a fair price in 2026, how to verify someone is legitimate, and the structure that prevents being overcharged.
Distinct from our renovation handbook (which covers project-scale work), this article is about the routine and emergency tradesperson hires that come up several times a year for any Greek property. A blocked drain. A power outage in one circuit. The boiler that won't ignite. The kitchen tap that's been dripping since November. The cockroach problem that arrives in July. The locksmith call after a key is lost.
For an absentee owner, each of these is a logistical problem that has to be solved without being physically present. The good news: Greek tradespeople in 2026 are easier to engage remotely than they were even five years ago. The bad news: the contractor-overcharge pattern targeting diaspora owners (see our scams piece) is real, and the absence of someone on the ground to verify work is exactly what enables it.
The five trades that come up most often
1. Plumbers (υδραυλικός)
Most-common service calls in absentee properties:
- Blocked drains in kitchen or bathroom — €60–€150 for routine
- Boiler service (annual recommended) — €80–€180
- Boiler repair — €150–€600 depending on parts
- Leak detection and repair — €100–€500 depending on scope
- Water heater (ηλιακός) repair — €150–€400
- Tap and fitting replacement — €40–€120 per fitting plus parts
- Emergency call-out outside hours — typically 50–100% premium on standard rate
Hourly rate baseline 2026 Athens: €40–€60. Provincial: €30–€50. Premium for emergency: up to €100/hour.
2. Electricians (ηλεκτρολόγος)
- Circuit fault diagnosis — €60–€120 call-out plus hourly
- Socket or switch replacement — €30–€80 each
- Distribution-board work — €150–€500
- Light fixture installation — €40–€120 per fixture
- EV charger installation for diaspora owners with a Greek-resident vehicle — €400–€1,500
- Smart-home device wiring — €60–€150 per device
Hourly rate baseline 2026: €45–€70 in Athens; €35–€55 provincial.
3. Pest control (απεντόμωση / μυοκτονία)
- One-off cockroach treatment for an apartment — €60–€180
- Annual maintenance treatment — €200–€450
- Mouse / rat treatment — €120–€350
- Mosquito treatment for villa with garden — €150–€400 per visit
- Wood-borer treatment (older island properties especially) — €400–€1,500
For empty properties, our recommendation is two annual prophylactic visits (May + October) rather than waiting for an active problem.
4. Locksmiths (κλειδαράς)
- Routine lockout — €60–€120 daytime; €100–€250 nights/weekends
- Lock replacement — €80–€200 for standard residential lock plus parts
- Security door installation — €1,200–€2,500 (see our security piece)
- Safe installation — €200–€600 plus the safe itself
5. Air conditioning (συντήρηση κλιματιστικών)
- Annual service — €50–€90 per unit
- Refrigerant top-up — €60–€120
- New unit installation — €400–€900 plus the unit (€450–€1,200)
- Repair — €80–€350 depending on issue
How to find legitimate Greek tradespeople from abroad
Five routes in order of reliability:
Route 1 — Through your home-watch service or property manager
The most reliable. A home-watch service that's been operating in your district has worked with the local tradespeople over months or years and has filtered them by reliability, fair pricing, and clean invoicing. Cost is typically the contractor's invoiced price plus a coordination fee (built into your membership or modest hourly rate) — total usually similar to what a Greek resident would pay because the price markup other introductions impose is absent.
Route 2 — Through your building manager (διαχειριστής)
The building's διαχειριστής often has go-to tradespeople for common building issues — same plumber/electrician used across multiple units. Convenient and the building-level relationship usually keeps pricing fair. Caveat: see our scams piece on the building-manager-as-single-point-of-failure pattern — diversify rather than make this your only channel.
Route 3 — Through Greek-language community recommendations
Facebook groups for your specific neighbourhood (most Athens districts have an active community group), Greek-Australian/Greek-American diaspora property groups, or your Greek family/friends if they have current relationships. Useful for second opinions and cross-checking pricing.
Route 4 — Online platforms
Major Greek tradesperson platforms in 2026:
- Doctoranytime / e-table for service professionals (limited but growing)
- WorkUp (workup.gr) — broader tradesperson directory with reviews
- Provider — pre-vetted service providers in larger cities
- Google reviews and Google Business profiles for individual firms
Reviews on Greek platforms are reasonably trustworthy in 2026 (a marked improvement on 5 years ago). Filter for tradespeople with sustained 4+ year review histories rather than recently-set-up profiles.
Route 5 — Direct cold contact
Calling a local plumber/electrician you find via Google Maps and asking for a price. Sometimes works fine, sometimes you get the diaspora overcharge. Worth using only for non-urgent routine work where you can compare quotes.
Verifying a tradesperson is legitimate
For any tradesperson you don't have an existing trusted relationship with:
- Confirm Greek ΑΦΜ and VAT registration. Any registered Greek business has a VAT number; legitimate invoices show it. Your accountant can verify the ΑΦΜ against AADE records in 2 minutes
- Ask for a written quote with breakdown of labour, materials and VAT (24% on labour and materials). Verbal quotes lead to invoice disputes
- Look up the firm online. Even small Greek tradespeople have Google Business profiles in 2026. No online presence at all is a flag
- Ask for a recent reference contact — particularly for non-trivial work above €500. Legitimate tradespeople have references
- Confirm whether they invoice as a sole trader (ατομική επιχείρηση) or a company. Both are fine; what matters is whether you receive a proper VAT invoice or "we'll just do it cash" — the latter is illegal in Greece for amounts above €500 and removes your recourse if anything goes wrong
Payment structure that prevents overcharging
The structure we recommend for any work above €200:
- Written quote before work starts — labour, materials, VAT, timing
- Photos before and after, ideally sent by the tradesperson via WhatsApp the same day
- VAT invoice via email same day or next business day
- Payment by bank transfer to the firm's business account, not personal account
- No cash for amounts above €500
- For larger work (€800+) split into a deposit and final payment against demonstrated completion
- Withhold the final 10–15% until any snag list is closed
For routine sub-€200 jobs (a tap replacement, an electrical outlet), the same VAT-invoice-bank-transfer hygiene applies but the multi-stage payment structure is overkill.
Common diaspora overcharges to watch for
- Generic "emergency" pricing for non-emergencies. A blocked drain at 3pm Tuesday isn't an emergency. Question 100% premiums on routine work
- Materials marked up beyond reasonable retail. Tradespeople do mark up materials (typically 10–30%); markups above 50% are abusive
- "Unexpected complications" without photographic evidence. Any tradesperson saying "we found a much bigger problem inside the wall" should be able to send photos. Insist
- Bundling routine maintenance with unnecessary extras. A boiler service that turns into a recommendation for new pump, new circuit board, and new thermostat in one visit — pause and get a second opinion
- The "round number" invoice. Legitimate VAT invoices rarely produce exact round totals because of the 24% VAT math. Round-number invoices with no VAT breakdown are often cash-deal indicators
When work is genuinely urgent and you can't verify in advance
Boilers fail in cold snaps. Pipes burst on long weekends. Your home-watch service may be unable to vet a tradesperson within the hour. Fallback structure:
- Have at least one pre-identified emergency contact for each major trade (plumber, electrician, locksmith) in your contact list before the emergency happens
- Confirm scope and approximate cost before authorising work — even by phone, get a number
- Document the situation with photos from the tradesperson before and after
- Accept the marginally higher emergency rate as the cost of urgency
- Get a proper VAT invoice even for emergency work
- Follow up within 1–2 weeks with your usual home-watch contact for a sanity-check on the cost and quality
How home watch fits
For our members, contractor coordination is one of the highest-value parts of the relationship. Standard workflow:
- We maintain a vetted network of trades across districts — plumbers, electricians, pest control, locksmiths, A/C technicians, painters, glaziers
- When an issue arises (detected by us during inspection, reported by tenant, or flagged by smart-home alert), we triage and dispatch the appropriate trade
- We meet the tradesperson at the property — you don't need to grant remote access to people you've never met
- Before-and-after photos and full documentation
- VAT invoices forwarded to you and to your accountant in the same workflow
- Quarterly summary of all contractor activity — what was done, what it cost, what the property's current state is
Pricing: we generally pass through the contractor's actual invoice unchanged plus a per-incident coordination fee (built into membership tier or per-visit basis depending on plan).
Companion reading: renovation handbook, property scams, annual maintenance calendar.
That's the right instinct — and the right reason to have a home-watch relationship that includes vetted contractor access. Worth a conversation. Talk to us →