Electrical Panel Guide

Panel Upgrade Cost Guide

Understand electrical panel upgrade cost factors, including amperage, utility coordination, permits, and service equipment.

What is included in a panel upgrade?

An electrical panel upgrade can include a new breaker panel, breakers, grounding and bonding updates, utility coordination, labeling, permits, and inspection. Some projects also require a new meter base, service mast, service entrance conductors, or utility-side work.

Because of that, homeowners should avoid comparing panel upgrade quotes by panel size alone. The full scope matters more than the brand name on the panel.

Main cost drivers

  • Existing amperage and target amperage
  • Indoor or outdoor panel location
  • Meter base and service entrance condition
  • Utility disconnect and reconnect requirements
  • Grounding and bonding corrections
  • Permit and inspection fees
  • Space for new circuits and future projects

When an upgrade may be needed

Panel upgrades are often discussed when a homeowner adds an EV charger, large appliance, hot tub, workshop equipment, or major remodel load. They can also be needed when the existing panel is damaged, obsolete, overloaded, or short on breaker space.

Before approving work, ask the electrician whether they performed a load calculation and whether the quote includes all service equipment needed to pass inspection.

Related planning

If the upgrade is connected to vehicle charging, read the EV charger installation cost guide. If you are planning interior improvements at the same time, the recessed lighting cost guide can help you coordinate work.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a 200 amp panel?

A 200 amp panel is common for modern homes, but the right size depends on load calculations, existing service equipment, and future electrical plans.

Does a panel upgrade require a permit?

Most panel upgrades require permits and inspection because the work affects service equipment and household safety.