Electrical Panel Upgrade Cost in 2026: 100A to 200A Service Pricing

2026-04-16 · 8 min read · US Home Renovations

Upgrading your home's electrical panel is one of those projects that most homeowners don't think about until they have to — and then they realize they have no idea what it should cost. In 2026, the most common upgrade (100A to 200A service) runs $1,500–$4,000 installed, with the national average around $2,200. Full panel replacements at the same amperage run $1,200–$2,500.

Here's exactly what drives that range, what's included in a fair quote, and how to approach the permit and inspection process.

Cost by upgrade type

The biggest cost driver is how much capacity you're adding — and whether the utility needs to upgrade the service line coming into your home at the same time.

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UpgradeInstalled costWhen you need it
60A → 100A$800–$2,000Very old homes; rarely needed today
100A → 150A$1,200–$2,800Modest capacity increase; less common
100A → 200A$1,500–$4,000Most common upgrade — adding EV charger, renovation, solar
200A → 400A$3,000–$7,500Large homes, workshops, whole-home EV charging, batteries
Panel replacement (same amps)$1,200–$2,500Replacing an aged, recalled, or failed panel

Utility service upgrade: If your home currently receives 100A service from the street and you're upgrading to 200A, the utility company may need to upgrade the service line and meter base. This coordination adds $500–$2,000 and typically 1–4 weeks of additional lead time. Your electrician will coordinate with the utility on your behalf — ask upfront whether a service upgrade is needed.

What's included in the installed price

A complete electrical panel upgrade quote should include all of the following. If a contractor gives you a number without specifying these, ask:

  • New panel and breakers — the main load center and circuit breakers for all existing circuits
  • Labor — typically 4–8 hours for a straightforward swap; longer if wiring needs rerouting
  • Permit fees — required in virtually every jurisdiction (more on this below)
  • Utility coordination — if a service upgrade is needed, your electrician should handle the application
  • Final inspection — a licensed inspector from your local codes office verifies the installation
  • Cleanup and disposal — removal of the old panel
  • Labor warranty — at minimum 1 year; reputable contractors offer 2–5 years

Some contractors quote equipment cost only and charge separately for labor and permits. Always get a total installed price in writing before agreeing to anything.

Cost by panel brand

Panel brand affects both the upfront cost and long-term reliability. All major brands below meet NEC code requirements — the differences are in build quality, warranty, and parts availability.

BrandPanel cost (200A)Notes
Square D (Schneider)$150–$350Industry standard; most electricians know it well
Siemens$130–$300Reliable, widely available, good warranty
Eaton$120–$280Solid value; common in residential work
Leviton$100–$220Budget option; less common for full upgrades
Cutler-Hammer (Eaton)$140–$300Legacy brand, still widely supported

The panel itself is a modest part of the total cost — labor, permit, and coordination fees are where most of the money goes. Don't choose a contractor based on which brand they install; choose based on license, reviews, and a complete itemized quote.

Labor and regional pricing

Electrician labor rates range from $50–$150 per hour depending on your market. A 100A-to-200A upgrade takes 4–8 hours for a licensed electrician, plus time for permit coordination and the final inspection walk-through.

Regional pricing varies significantly:

MarketTypical 100A→200A cost
Rural / low cost-of-living areas$1,200–$2,000
Mid-size cities (Nashville, Raleigh, Austin)$1,800–$3,200
Major metros (NYC, LA, Chicago, SF)$2,500–$5,000+

Permit requirements

An electrical panel upgrade requires a permit in virtually every jurisdiction in the United States — no exceptions for this type of work. Here's how the process works:

Who pulls the permit: Your licensed electrician should pull the permit, not you. A licensed contractor submits their credentials as part of the application. If a contractor asks you to pull it yourself, or suggests skipping it, walk away — both are serious red flags.

Permit cost: Residential electrical permits typically run $50–$350 depending on your city or county. This should be included in your contractor's quote — confirm upfront.

Processing time: Most jurisdictions process residential electrical permits within 1–2 weeks. Some cities offer expedited review for an additional fee.

Inspection: After the work is complete, a local codes inspector visits to verify the installation meets current NEC (National Electrical Code) standards. Your contractor coordinates this — you shouldn't need to do anything except be available to provide access.

Consequences of skipping: Unpermitted electrical work creates real problems at resale (buyers' inspectors flag it), can void your homeowner's insurance coverage for electrical-related claims, and can require expensive tear-out and redo if discovered by your local codes office.

Project timeline

PhaseTypical duration
Get quotes from 2–3 licensed electricians3–5 days
Permit application and approval1–2 weeks
Utility coordination (if service upgrade needed)1–4 weeks additional
Installation day4–8 hours (power off during work)
Final inspection1–5 days after completion

Power outage during installation: Yes — your power will be off for the duration of the installation, typically 4–8 hours. Plan accordingly. Your electrician will coordinate the temporary shutoff with you in advance.

Signs you need a panel upgrade

Most homeowners discover they need an upgrade for one of these reasons:

  • Adding an EV charger: A Level 2 home charger requires a dedicated 40–50A circuit. Most 100A panels can accommodate this, but if your panel is already near capacity, an upgrade is necessary.
  • Installing solar panels: A solar array with battery backup often requires 200A service to handle generation and storage simultaneously.
  • Major renovation or addition: Adding a kitchen, master suite, or finished basement significantly increases electrical demand.
  • Breakers tripping frequently: If you're resetting breakers regularly, your system is undersized for your usage.
  • Recalled or hazardous panel: Federal Pacific Electric (FPE/Stab-Lok) and Zinsco panels have documented failure rates and should be replaced regardless of age. If you have one of these, don't wait — replacement is a safety issue, not just a capacity issue.
  • Aluminum branch wiring on 15/20A circuits: Homes built 1965–1973 may have aluminum wiring on small circuits, which creates fire risk at connections over time. A licensed electrician can assess and remediate.

How to choose a licensed electrician

For panel work specifically, don't cut corners on contractor selection:

  • Verify their license in your state — electrical contractors must hold a state license. Ask for their license number and verify it on your state's contractor licensing board website.
  • Confirm they carry liability insurance and workers' comp — panel work involves high-voltage service lines. Uninsured work puts your home and finances at risk.
  • Get at least two quotes — on a $2,000+ project, it's worth a few calls. Wide price variation (more than 30–40%) is a signal to dig into what each quote includes.
  • Ask specifically about permit and inspection — a licensed electrician will confirm they pull the permit themselves. If they're vague about this, keep looking.
  • Check reviews on Google and the BBB — look specifically for mentions of permit process, inspection results, and whether the work was done on time and on budget.

Frequently Asked Questions

A 100A to 200A electrical panel upgrade costs $1,500–$4,000 installed in 2026, with a national average around $2,200. The range depends on your local labor market, whether a utility service upgrade is needed, and panel brand. Get at least two quotes from licensed electricians for your specific situation.

Yes — in virtually every U.S. jurisdiction. Panel upgrades require a building permit and a final inspection from your local codes office. Your licensed electrician should pull the permit; if they suggest skipping it or ask you to pull it yourself, find someone else. Permit cost is typically $50–$350 and should be included in your contractor's quote.

Yes. Your power will be off for the duration of the installation, typically 4–8 hours. Your electrician will coordinate the shutoff time with you in advance. Plan for a half-day without electricity — refrigerators and freezers are fine for that duration if you minimize opening them.

The installation itself takes 4–8 hours. But from when you hire an electrician to when the job is complete and inspected, plan for 2–4 weeks — 1–2 weeks for permit approval, additional time if a utility service upgrade is needed, plus scheduling the final inspection after installation.

A panel upgrade increases your home's amperage capacity — for example, from 100A to 200A. A panel replacement swaps out the existing panel for a new one at the same amperage, typically done when the current panel is aged, recalled (like Federal Pacific or Zinsco), or failing. Panel replacement at the same amperage costs $1,200–$2,500. An upgrade costs more because the utility service line may also need to be upgraded.

Yes — a 200A panel is considered a baseline expectation by buyers in most markets. An outdated 100A panel or a recalled panel (FPE, Zinsco) can reduce your sale price or kill deals entirely. The upgrade typically recoups 50–80% of its cost in resale value and removes a common inspection flag that complicates transactions.

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