top of page

Egalvanic

Arc Flash Software for NFPA 70E Compliance

Egalvanic arc flash software helps electrical contractors, engineers, and facility teams maintain a trusted system-of-record for electrical assets, arc flash hazard documentation, one-lines, and maintenance workflows. Instead of relying on disconnected spreadsheets and static reports, teams can manage compliance and electrical system data in one centralized platform.

Arc flash warning label showing shock hazard PPE requirements for NFPA 70E compliance.

Maintain NFPA 70E Compliance
with Egalvanic Arc Flash Software

Meet OSHA and NFPA 70E requirements with a centralized platform for managing arc flash asset data, audit documentation, labels, infrared inspections, maintenance history, and compliance records. Egalvanic helps organizations maintain accurate electrical system data over time so facilities can stay audit-ready, reduce repeat field collection, and support safer electrical maintenance operations.

Maintain a Trusted System of Record

Track electrical assets, one-lines, maintenance history, and compliance documentation in one centralized platform.

Organize Arc Flash Audit Data

Capture and maintain the field data required for arc flash studies, labeling workflows, and future compliance updates.

Connect Field and Engineering Teams

Keep electricians, engineers, and facility teams working from the same trusted source of data.

Who Needs NFPA 70E Compliance Software?

Any organization responsible for energized electrical systems needs a reliable way to maintain asset records, compliance documentation, and electrical safety workflows. Egalvanic helps electrical contractors, facility managers, engineers, and safety teams maintain a centralized system of record for arc flash data, one-lines, labels, inspections, and maintenance history across the entire facility. Common industries and facilities include:

  • Manufacturing plants and production facilities

  • Utilities and energy providers

  • Commercial and industrial buildings

  • Data centers and critical infrastructure

  • Electrical contractors and service providers

If your facility includes electrical panels, switchgear, transformers, MCCs, or other energized equipment, maintaining accurate system data is critical for supporting NFPA 70E compliance and long-term electrical safety programs.

Electrical maintenance crew performing an arc flash audit inside an industrial switchboard room.

What Does NFPA 70E Compliance Require for Arc Flash Safety?

Electrical safety compliance depends on maintaining accurate electrical system data, current documentation, and repeatable maintenance workflows over time. Egalvanic helps contractors, engineers, and facility teams maintain a trusted system-of-record for electrical infrastructure, maintenance history, and compliance workflows.

Maintain Arc Flash Asset Data

Capture and organize electrical asset information, equipment details, one-lines, and field audit data required to support arc flash studies and NFPA 70E compliance.

Conduct Arc Flash Hazard Analysis

Maintain the system data required to support incident energy calculations, hazard analysis workflows, and future arc flash study updates.

Manage Arc Flash Labels and Documentation

Track arc flash labels, inspection records, maintenance history, infrared scans, and compliance documentation in one connected platform.

Maintain Infrared Inspection and Maintenance Records

Organize infrared inspections, test results, corrective actions, and maintenance history to support ongoing NFPA 70E and NFPA 70B programs.

​​

​See how Egalvanic helps teams manage arc flash documentation, maintenance records, electrical asset data, and compliance workflows in one connected platform.

Electrical project manager reviewing a dashboard at a high-rise construction site with technicians at work.

How Arc Flash Software Supports NFPA 70E Compliance

Maintaining NFPA 70E compliance starts with accurate, continuously maintained electrical system data. Egalvanic helps contractors, engineers, and facility teams organize the asset information, documentation, one-lines, and maintenance records required to support arc flash studies and ongoing compliance workflows. Without a centralized system-of-record, electrical data often becomes fragmented across spreadsheets, PDFs, reports, and disconnected field notes. This increases the likelihood of outdated one-lines, duplicate field collection, inconsistent labeling, and compliance gaps.

With Egalvanic, teams can:

  • Maintain a centralized electrical asset registry​

  • Organize arc flash labels and compliance documentation

  • Track one-line changes and maintenance history over time

  • Support future arc flash studies without rebuilding audits from scratch

  • Connect field teams, engineers, and facility stakeholders in one platform

How Contractors Are Maintaining Electrical Assets and Winning More Work with Egalvanic

★★★★★

Electrical contractor service truck for Hi-Tech Electric Company featured in customer success story.

Hi-Tech Electric Company Success Story

“It’s been an absolute success for our company. Egalvanic has allowed us to quickly document our client asset database and significantly increase the speed of our quoting and proposals. The platform has made it easy for us to send out multiple bids in the same day and pursue more opportunities.”

— Brian O'Donnell, Project Executive

Electrical asset tracking management dashboard showing main electrical panel, compressor, and disconnect switch list.

Our Approach to Electrical Safety and Compliance

Egalvanic helps contractors, engineers, and facility teams maintain a trusted system-of-record for electrical assets, maintenance workflows, and compliance documentation. Instead of relying on disconnected spreadsheets, static reports, and outdated one-lines, teams can manage electrical infrastructure data in one centralized platform built for long-term maintenance and arc flash readiness. Use Egalvanic to:

  • Maintain electrical asset and one-line data

  • Organize arc flash labels and compliance documentation

  • Track maintenance history and inspection records

  • Support arc flash studies and hazard analysis workflows

  • Manage infrared inspection and thermography records

 

Maintain Arc Flash Data Over Time

Arc flash studies and one-line documentation become outdated as electrical systems change through maintenance, retrofits, shutdowns, and equipment replacements. Egalvanic helps organizations maintain current electrical asset data, one-lines, labels, and maintenance records so future arc flash studies and compliance updates do not require rebuilding system information from scratch. By maintaining a continuously updated system-of-record, contractors and facility teams can reduce duplicate field collection, improve audit readiness, and support long-term NFPA 70E compliance workflows.

Technician inspecting electrical panels with a thermal camera beside a mobile inspection app screen.
Tablet displaying an industrial IR scan asset management dashboard with equipment and inspection data.

Organize Infrared Inspection and Thermography Records

Infrared inspections generate critical maintenance and condition data across electrical systems. Egalvanic helps teams organize thermal images, inspection records, deficiencies, corrective actions, and maintenance history in one connected platform.

 

By linking thermography workflows directly to electrical assets and one-lines, contractors and facility teams can maintain better long-term visibility into equipment condition, maintenance history, and compliance documentation.

The Cost of Outdated Electrical System Data

Electrical systems constantly change through maintenance, retrofits, shutdowns, and equipment replacements. When asset records, one-lines, and compliance documentation are not continuously maintained, arc flash studies and safety programs quickly become outdated. Outdated system data can lead to inaccurate labeling, missed maintenance history, increased downtime, equipment damage, OSHA compliance issues, and unnecessary exposure to electrical hazards. Egalvanic helps organizations maintain a trusted electrical system-of-record so contractors, engineers, and facility teams can support long-term maintenance planning, arc flash readiness, and ongoing NFPA 70E and NFPA 70B compliance workflows in one connected platform.

Insights and Guidance on NFPA 70B

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an arc flash?

An arc flash is a dangerous electrical event caused by a sudden release of energy through the air between conductors or energized equipment. Arc flashes can generate extreme heat, pressure waves, molten metal, and intense light that may result in serious injuries, equipment damage, and operational downtime. Arc flash hazards are commonly associated with electrical panels, switchgear, motor control centers, transformers, and other energized systems.

Why do arc flashes happen?

Arc flashes can occur when electrical systems experience faults, damaged equipment, loose connections, insulation failure, improper maintenance, or accidental contact with energized components. As electrical infrastructure changes over time through maintenance, retrofits, and equipment replacements, outdated one-lines, incomplete asset records, and missing maintenance history can increase operational risk. Maintaining accurate electrical system data and inspection records is an important part of supporting long-term electrical safety and compliance workflows.

What are the NFPA 70E arc flash label requirements?

NFPA 70E requires electrical equipment that may need examination, adjustment, servicing, or maintenance while energized to be properly labeled with arc flash hazard information. Arc flash labels typically include details such as:

  • Nominal system voltage

  • Arc flash boundary

  • Incident energy or PPE category

  • Required safety information and warnings


Organizations are also expected to maintain accurate electrical system documentation and update labels when system changes impact arc flash calculations or hazard analysis results. Egalvanic helps teams organize asset data, labels, maintenance records, and compliance documentation in one connected system-of-record.

bottom of page