// NYC · Master Licensed · All 5 Boroughs
Ceiling Fan Installation in NYC
Fans installed safely on fan-rated boxes — replacing fixtures, in new locations, on high ceilings, and with smart controls. The right way, in NYC’s plaster ceilings and pre-war wiring.
- Fan-rated brace box installation
- Fixture-to-fan conversions
- New locations with new wiring
- High & sloped ceiling mounting
- Smart fans & remote controls
- Fan/light combos with separate switching
The fan-rated box — the detail that makes or breaks the job
Here’s the thing most homeowners don’t know: the electrical box behind your existing light fixture is almost certainly not rated to hold a ceiling fan. Standard fixture boxes are designed for static weight up to about 50 lbs. A ceiling fan is dynamic load — 15–50 lbs of spinning, vibrating mass applying torque to the box every second it runs.
Fans hung from standard boxes work loose over months or years. The wobble gets worse, the screws back out, and eventually the fan can drop. The NEC requires fans to hang from boxes listed for fan support — and we treat that as non-negotiable.
What we install: an expandable fan-rated brace box that spans between ceiling joists, rated for fans up to 70 lbs. In NYC’s plaster-and-lath ceilings this takes care and the right technique — done wrong, plaster cracks radiate from the opening. Done right, the opening is no larger than the canopy and the fan is rock solid.
If your current fan wobbles, the most likely cause isn’t balance — it’s the box. We can inspect and tell you in minutes whether it’s a blade-balance fix ($0–$50 in parts) or a box that should be replaced before it becomes a hazard.
What we install
Fixture-to-fan conversion
Replace any ceiling light with a fan or fan/light, including the fan-rated box upgrade. The most common job.
New fan locations
No fixture there now? We fish new wiring through joist bays, add the switch, and install the brace box — minimal wall and ceiling opening.
High & sloped ceilings
Double-height spaces, lofts, and sloped/cathedral mounts with the correct downrods and angle adapters. We bring the ladders and scaffolding.
Smart fans
HomeKit/Alexa/Google-controlled fans (Haiku, Hunter, Minka), plus retrofit smart controls for existing fans where the wiring allows.
Separate fan/light switching
Where one switch controls both, we can often run the extra conductor so fan and light switch independently — far better than pull chains.
Outdoor & damp-rated fans
Wet/damp-rated fans for covered terraces, porches, and patios — properly GFCI-protected per code.
Commercial ceiling fans
Large-diameter and high-volume fans for restaurants, retail, lofts, and gyms.
Fan removal & repair
Wobble diagnosis, capacitor and switch repair, remote receiver replacement, or clean removal and conversion back to a fixture.
Ceiling fans in NYC apartments — practical notes
Ceiling height: Code requires blades at least 7 feet above the floor. Many pre-war NYC apartments have 8’6″–9′ ceilings — fine for standard mounts. For 8′ ceilings, low-profile “hugger” fans are the answer; we’ll tell you before you buy the wrong fan.
Co-op and condo buildings: A fixture-to-fan swap on the existing circuit generally doesn’t need board approval. New wiring runs usually do. We handle the paperwork when it’s required.
Real energy math: A ceiling fan draws 15–75 watts; a window AC draws 500–1,500. Fans don’t cool air, but they let you raise the AC setpoint 3–4°F at equal comfort — a meaningful summer savings in any NYC apartment, and often the difference between needing one AC or two.
Buying advice (free): Tell us the room size before you buy. 44″ blades for rooms under 12’×12′, 52″ for typical living rooms and bedrooms, 60″+ for large or open-plan spaces. DC-motor fans cost more upfront but are near-silent and use a third of the power.
Service areas
Frequently asked questions
Replacing a fixture with a fan where a fan-rated box already exists: $180–$280. Adding the fan-rated brace box (needed in most cases): +$100–$180. A fan in a completely new location with new wiring and switch: $400–$600. High-ceiling and scaffold jobs are quoted on site.
Usually yes. The existing box must be replaced with a fan-rated brace box — standard fixture boxes aren’t built for a fan’s weight and vibration. We install the brace box through the existing opening in most cases, keeping plaster damage to zero.
Three causes in order of likelihood: an inadequate (non-fan-rated) box working loose, blade imbalance, or a bent blade bracket. We diagnose in minutes. Box replacement is the fix that matters for safety; balance kits handle the rest.
Often yes. If the cable run to the box has an available conductor, we wire fan and light to independent switches. Where it doesn’t, smart fan controls or RF remotes give you independent control without opening walls.
Not for a fixture-to-fan swap on the existing circuit. New wiring runs or new switch locations fed from the panel require a DOB permit, which we file when needed.
Yes — double-height living rooms, stairwells, lofts, and cathedral ceilings. We use the correct downrod length for air circulation, sloped-ceiling adapters where needed, and bring appropriate ladders or scaffolding.
What our customers say
“Two fans in our Astoria apartment — both spots had old fixtures with flimsy boxes. They installed proper brace boxes through the existing holes, zero plaster damage, and both fans are silent and rock solid.”
“Wanted a fan in the bedroom where there was no fixture at all. They fished the wiring, added a switch by the door, installed a brace box — you can’t tell the ceiling was ever touched.”
“Big Haiku smart fan in our Tribeca loft, 14-foot ceilings. They brought scaffolding, got the downrod length exactly right, and integrated it with HomeKit. Flawless.”
Get a free ceiling fan quote
Tell us the room, the ceiling height, and whether there’s a fixture there now — we’ll quote the full job including the fan-rated box, usually same day.
