“Aluminum Wiring, Remediated” — The Question That Phrase Should Raise
Aluminum branch wiring with evidence of prior remediation at the outlets spot-checked during the inspection. The full scope of remediation work performed throughout the rest of the home wasn't visible or verifiable from a standard visual inspection.
Solid aluminum branch wiring was commonly installed in U.S. homes — including plenty in the Jacksonville area — from roughly the mid-1960s to mid-1970s, a period when copper prices spiked and aluminum was a cheaper substitute.
Aluminum expands and contracts differently than copper, so connections at outlets and switches can loosen over time if they were never properly treated — a real fire-safety consideration, not just a cosmetic one. The key question isn't whether aluminum wiring exists; it's whether remediation was applied consistently throughout the whole house, which a spot-check alone can't confirm.
Ask the seller for documentation describing the full scope of any remediation work, and have a licensed electrician confirm it was applied consistently — not just at the outlets that happened to be accessible.
A regular finding in homes from that build era. Accepted fixes include CO/ALR-rated devices and approved connectors such as COPALUM crimps or AlumiConn connectors at every termination point.
Aluminum wiring by itself isn't a verdict — how thoroughly it was addressed is the part worth running down before closing.
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