ESA Electrical Permits in Ontario: What Every Ottawa Homeowner Must Know

Quick Answer — ESA Permits & Inspections

The Electrical Safety Authority (ESA) is Ontario’s regulatory body for electrical safety. Any electrical work beyond simple device replacements (swapping a light fixture or outlet) legally requires an ESA notification (permit) filed by a licensed electrician. Permits cost $100–$300 depending on the scope of work. After work is completed, the ESA conducts an electrical safety authority inspection to verify code compliance. Skipping this process voids your home insurance and is an Ontario code violation.

📋 Questions about permits? (613) 518-5010

If you’ve ever hired an electrician or tackled an electrical project in your Ottawa home, you’ve probably heard the term “ESA permit” or “ESA inspection.” But most homeowners don’t fully understand what the Electrical Safety Authority does, when a permit is actually required, or what happens if you skip it. Given that unpermitted electrical work can void your home insurance, create fire hazards, and cause major headaches when selling your home — this is information every Ontario homeowner needs.

This guide from Ottawa Electric Service explains the ESA process in plain language — what requires a permit, what doesn’t, how much it costs, and how our ESA-certified electricians handle it all for you.

What Is the Electrical Safety Authority?

The Electrical Safety Authority (ESA) is Ontario’s designated authority for electrical safety. It operates under the Ontario Electricity Act and is responsible for:

📋 Administering Permits

All electrical work in Ontario must be reported to the ESA through a notification (permit) system. This ensures every project is tracked and inspected.

🔍 Conducting Inspections

ESA inspectors verify that completed electrical work meets the Ontario Electrical Safety Code (OESC). They physically inspect the work and issue a certificate of inspection.

🪪 Licensing Electricians

The ESA maintains the ECRA/ESA licensing system that authorizes electrical contractors and master electricians to perform electrical work in Ontario.

⚖️ Enforcing Safety Standards

The ESA investigates electrical incidents, enforces the Ontario Electrical Safety Code, and can issue orders to correct unsafe electrical conditions.

💡 ESA vs. Your Electrician: Who Does What?

Your licensed electrician files the ESA notification (permit), performs the work, and schedules the inspection. The ESA inspector — an independent government authority — then reviews the work. Think of it like a building inspector for your electrical system. Your electrician does the work; the ESA confirms it’s safe and code-compliant.

What Electrical Work Requires an ESA Permit in Ontario?

The general rule: any work that involves modifying your home’s electrical wiring requires an ESA permit. Here’s the specific breakdown:

✅ ESA PERMIT REQUIRED

❌ NO PERMIT NEEDED

  • Replacing a light fixture (same wiring)
  • Replacing a standard outlet or switch cover
  • Swapping a plug-in appliance
  • Replacing a fuse or resetting a breaker
  • Plugging in a portable generator
  • Changing a light bulb (obviously)
  • Installing plug-in smart home devices
  • Battery-powered device installations

Note: Even “simple” replacements must use CSA-approved components and meet code. If in doubt, ask your electrician.

⚠️ The Grey Area: What About Replacing Outlets and Light Fixtures?

Technically, a homeowner can replace a light fixture or outlet with an identical-type replacement without a permit. However, if the replacement changes the wiring configuration (e.g., adding a dimmer where none existed, converting from a standard outlet to a GFCI outlet), an ESA permit is required. Many homeowners unknowingly do non-compliant work. When in doubt, a quick call to a licensed electrician clarifies whether your project needs a permit.

ESA Permit Costs in Ontario: What You’ll Pay

Electrical Safety Authority permit fees are standardized across Ontario. Here’s what common residential projects cost:

Project Type ESA Permit Fee What’s Inspected
Single circuit addition $100 – $150 New wire run, breaker, connection point
EV charger installation $100 – $200 Dedicated circuit, wire gauge, charger connection, panel capacity
Panel upgrade (100A → 200A) $150 – $250 New panel, service entrance, grounding, all reconnections
Basement or addition wiring $150 – $300 All new circuits, outlets, fixtures, smoke detectors
Full home rewire $200 – $400 Entire electrical system — panel, circuits, outlets, grounding
Generator / transfer switch $150 – $250 Transfer switch connection, generator wiring, panel integration

When you hire Ottawa Electric Service, permit fees are included in our quoted price. We file the ESA notification, schedule the inspection, and ensure everything passes — you don’t have to deal with the ESA directly.

How the ESA Inspection Process Works: Step by Step

Here’s exactly what happens from permit filing to final certificate for an electrical safety authority inspection:

1

Electrician Files the ESA Notification

Before starting work, your licensed electrician submits a notification to the Electrical Safety Authority describing the scope of work, your address, and the ECRA/ESA licence number. This is done online through the ESA portal. The notification generates a confirmation number — your “permit.”

2

Electrical Work Is Performed

Your electrician completes the work according to the Ontario Electrical Safety Code (OESC). For rough-in work (wiring before walls are closed), an interim inspection may be requested so the ESA can inspect wiring before drywall goes up.

3

ESA Inspection Is Scheduled

After work is complete, the electrician requests a final inspection. The ESA assigns an inspector who will visit your home — typically within 5–10 business days. You or your electrician must be present to provide access.

4

Inspector Reviews the Work

The ESA inspector checks that all work meets the OESC — correct wire gauge, proper grounding, arc-fault and ground-fault protection where required (including bathroom and kitchen GFCI circuits, and exterior weather-rated installations), secure connections, proper clearances, and overall workmanship. The inspection typically takes 20–60 minutes depending on project scope.

5

Certificate Issued (or Deficiencies Noted)

If everything passes, the ESA issues a Certificate of Inspection — keep this document permanently with your home records. If deficiencies are found, the inspector documents what needs to be corrected and a re-inspection is scheduled after corrections are made.

We Handle All ESA Permits & Inspections for You

Licensed, insured, ESA-certified. Permit filing, work, and inspection — all included in one quote.

(613) 518-5010

What Happens If You Skip the ESA Permit? The Real Risks

Unpermitted electrical work is more common than you’d think — and the consequences are serious:

🏠 Insurance Voids Coverage

If a fire or electrical incident occurs and your insurer discovers unpermitted work, they can deny your claim entirely. This applies even if the unpermitted work didn’t directly cause the fire. Insurance companies routinely check ESA records during claims investigations.

🏷️ Problems Selling Your Home

Home inspectors and buyers’ lawyers check ESA records. Unpermitted work must be disclosed, creates legal liability, and often forces a price reduction or requires expensive retroactive permitting before closing.

⚡ Safety Hazards

Unpermitted work is often non-compliant work. Incorrect wire gauges, missing grounding, improper connections, and absent arc-fault protection create real fire and electrocution risks. The ESA inspection exists specifically to catch these issues.

💰 Fines & Forced Remediation

The ESA can issue orders requiring you to bring unpermitted work up to code at your expense. This often means opening walls, re-doing wiring, and paying for both the remediation work AND the permit/inspection fees that should have been paid originally.

Can Homeowners Do Their Own Electrical Work in Ontario?

This is one of the most misunderstood aspects of Ontario electrical safety law. Here’s the actual rule:

📜 Ontario Regulation 570/05

In Ontario, homeowners can perform electrical work on their own principal residence — but they MUST still file an ESA notification (permit) and have the work inspected. The work must still meet the Ontario Electrical Safety Code. This exception does NOT apply to rental properties, secondary homes, or any property you don’t personally live in.

✅ Homeowners CAN:

  • Perform electrical work on their own principal home
  • File for their own ESA permit (homeowner notification)
  • Install outlets, switches, lighting, and circuits

❌ Homeowners CANNOT:

  • Skip the ESA permit and inspection
  • Work on rental properties they own
  • Perform electrical work for other people
  • Work on panel upgrades or service entrance (recommended against)

💡 Our Honest Advice on DIY Electrical

Just because you can do your own electrical work doesn’t mean you should. Electrical work involves lethal voltages, and small mistakes (wrong wire gauge, missing ground, reversed polarity) create hidden hazards that may not show symptoms until a fire starts. A licensed electrician ensures the work is correct the first time and typically passes the ESA inspection without deficiencies — saving you the cost and hassle of re-inspection.

How to Verify Electrical Work Was Properly Permitted

Whether you’re buying a home, checking past work, or verifying your contractor’s credentials, the Electrical Safety Authority provides free online tools:

1

Check Inspection Status Online

Visit the ESA website and use their “Find an Inspection” tool. Enter your address to see all ESA notifications and inspection results for your property going back years.

2

Verify Your Contractor’s Licence

Use the ESA’s “Find a Licensed Electrical Contractor” tool to confirm your electrician holds a valid ECRA/ESA licence. An unlicensed contractor cannot legally file ESA notifications — meaning any work they do is automatically unpermitted.

3

Request a Voluntary Inspection

If you’ve bought a home and suspect previous electrical work was unpermitted, you can request a voluntary electrical inspection. This identifies any safety issues and gives you a clear picture of your home’s electrical condition.

Why Ottawa Homeowners Trust Ottawa Electric Service

Every job we do — from a single outlet to a full home renovation — follows the proper ESA process:

  • Fully ECRA/ESA licensed — our licence is current, verifiable, and covers all residential and commercial electrical work in Ontario
  • Permits always included — ESA notification filing is part of every quoted job; you never pay extra for it
  • High first-pass inspection rate — our work consistently passes ESA inspection on the first visit, meaning no delays or re-inspection fees
  • Certificate of Inspection provided — we ensure you receive and keep your ESA certificate for your home records and insurance files
  • Full-service contractorwiring, panel upgrades, EV chargers, surge protection, and lighting — all ESA-compliant

For the full Ontario Electrical Safety Code and ESA resources, visit esasafe.com. For questions about federal energy efficiency programs that may involve electrical upgrades, see Natural Resources Canada.

ESA-Compliant Electrical Service Areas

Kanata Nepean Barrhaven Orleans Centretown The Glebe Sandy Hill Stittsville Manotick Gloucester

Frequently Asked Questions: ESA Permits & Electrical Safety

What is an ESA permit and do I need one?

An ESA permit (technically called a “notification”) is a legal filing with the Electrical Safety Authority that documents electrical work being performed on your property. Any work that modifies your home’s permanent electrical wiring — adding circuits, upgrading panels, installing EV chargers, wiring renovations — requires an ESA permit. Simple device replacements (swapping a light fixture using existing wiring) generally do not.

How much does an ESA permit cost?

ESA notification fees range from $100–$400 depending on the scope of work. A single circuit addition is $100–$150, a panel upgrade is $150–$250, and a full home rewire is $200–$400. When you hire a licensed electrician, the permit fee is typically included in the quoted project price.

What happens during an ESA inspection?

An ESA inspector visits your home and reviews all completed electrical work against the Ontario Electrical Safety Code. They check wire gauge, connections, grounding, arc-fault protection, clearances, and overall workmanship. The inspection takes 20–60 minutes. If everything passes, you receive a Certificate of Inspection. If not, the inspector documents deficiencies that must be corrected before re-inspection.

Can I do my own electrical work in Ontario?

Yes — Ontario homeowners can legally perform electrical work on their own principal residence. However, you MUST still file an ESA notification, have the work inspected, and meet the Ontario Electrical Safety Code. This exception does not apply to rental properties, cottages, or properties you don’t live in. We strongly recommend hiring a licensed electrician for anything beyond basic tasks.

What if I bought a house with unpermitted electrical work?

This is more common than you’d expect. If you discover unpermitted work (check the ESA’s online database for your address), you have several options: hire a licensed electrician to inspect and remediate the work, file for a retroactive ESA inspection, or proactively upgrade the affected systems. Addressing it promptly protects your insurance coverage and home value.

Does unpermitted electrical work void my home insurance?

Potentially, yes. If an electrical fire or incident occurs and unpermitted work is discovered during the claims investigation, your insurer may deny the claim. Even if the unpermitted work wasn’t the direct cause, it creates grounds for coverage disputes. Proper ESA permits and inspection certificates are your proof of compliant, safe work.

How do I check if previous work on my home was permitted?

Visit the ESA website (esasafe.com) and use the “Find an Inspection” tool with your home address. This shows all ESA notifications and inspection results for your property. If major work was done (panel upgrade, renovation, addition) but no ESA record exists, that work was likely unpermitted.

Does my electrician handle the ESA permit or do I have to?

A licensed electrical contractor handles everything. They file the ESA notification before starting work, schedule the inspection after completion, and ensure the work passes. You don’t have to interact with the ESA directly. The permit fee is typically included in the contractor’s quote. Always confirm this upfront.

What’s the difference between an ESA inspection and a home electrical inspection?

An ESA inspection is a code-compliance check on specific newly completed electrical work — it confirms the work meets the Ontario Electrical Safety Code. A general home electrical inspection evaluates the overall condition of your entire electrical system (panel, wiring, outlets, grounding) and is typically done for peace of mind, pre-sale assessment, or when buying a home. Both are valuable but serve different purposes.

How long does it take to get an ESA inspection after the work is done?

Once your electrician requests a final inspection, the ESA typically schedules within 5–10 business days. Wait times can vary by season — spring and summer tend to be busier. Your electrician coordinates the scheduling and will advise you of the timeline. For time-sensitive projects (like renovations where drywall needs to go up), interim inspections can be arranged for rough-in wiring.

ESA-Certified. Code-Compliant. Every Single Job.

Permits included. Inspections coordinated. Certificates provided.

Serving Kanata, Nepean, Barrhaven, Orleans, Centretown, The Glebe & all of Ottawa.

(613) 518-5010

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. ESA permit fees and processes may change — visit esasafe.com for the most current information. All prices mentioned are estimates and may vary depending on project scope, location, and other factors. Readers are advised to consult with a licensed electrical contractor and verify details independently before making any decisions.