How Much Does an Electrical Panel Upgrade Cost in Ontario? 2026 Price Guide
Quick Answer — Electrical Panel Upgrade Cost in Ontario
The electrical panel upgrade cost in Ontario for 2026 ranges from $1,800 to $5,000+ depending on your current amperage, panel location, and whether the utility provider needs to upgrade the service entrance. The most common upgrade — 100A to 200A — costs $2,500–$4,500 including panel, labour, ESA permit, and inspection. Homes with older 60A service pay more due to additional work required.
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If you’re wondering how much is an electrical panel upgrade going to cost, you’re not alone. It’s one of the most common questions Ontario homeowners ask — whether they’re adding an EV charger, planning a renovation, dealing with frequent breaker trips, or selling a home with an outdated 60-amp fuse box. The problem is that costs vary wildly depending on where you are in Ontario and what work is needed.
This guide from Ottawa Electric Service breaks down the real electrical panel upgrade cost across Ontario — by upgrade type, by region, and by the factors that push your price up or down. We’re ESA-certified electricians who perform panel upgrades daily across Ottawa, Kanata, Nepean, Barrhaven, and Orleans, so these numbers reflect current 2026 pricing from the field — not recycled 2022 estimates.
Electrical Panel Upgrade Cost in Ontario: 2026 Price Table
Here are the current costs for the most common panel upgrades performed across Ontario:
All prices include labour, panel hardware, breakers, ESA permit, and inspection. Prices may vary by region, electrician, and complexity.
What’s Actually Included in the Electrical Panel Upgrade Cost?
When an electrician quotes you for upgrading an electrical panel, here’s where your money goes:
8 Factors That Affect Your Electrical Panel Upgrade Cost
Why one Ontario homeowner pays $2,500 and another pays $5,000+ for the same 200A upgrade? These variables explain the spread:
1. Current Panel Size
Upgrading from 100A to 200A is simpler (and cheaper) than going from 60A to 200A, which often requires a new service entrance, meter base, and more extensive wiring.
2. Service Entrance Condition
If the cable from the utility meter to the panel needs replacing (common with 60A and older 100A systems), add $200–$600 in materials and 2–4 hours of labour.
3. Meter Base Compatibility
Older meter bases rated for 100A or less need to be replaced for 200A service. Your utility provider (Hydro Ottawa, Hydro One, Toronto Hydro, etc.) must coordinate the changeover, which may add time and cost.
4. Existing Wiring Condition
If your home has outdated wiring — knob-and-tube, aluminum, or deteriorating connections — the electrician may need to upgrade branch circuits to meet current code. This can add $500–$3,000+ depending on the extent.
5. Panel Location & Access
Panels in tight crawl spaces, behind finished walls, or requiring relocation cost significantly more than accessible basement panels. If your panel must move (e.g., for a code violation or renovation), expect $2,500–$5,000+ for relocation alone.
6. Code Deficiencies
When an electrician opens up an old panel, they may discover code violations that must be corrected — missing ground wires, double-tapped breakers, improper bonding. ESA inspectors will flag these, and your electrician must fix them before passing inspection.
7. Utility Provider Coordination
Some upgrades require the utility to upgrade the service drop (overhead wire or underground feed). Hydro Ottawa typically handles this at no charge, but scheduling can add 2–6 weeks. Other Ontario utilities may charge for this service.
8. Geographic Region
The electrical panel upgrade cost varies across Ontario. GTA electricians typically charge 10–20% more than Ottawa or smaller cities due to higher overhead. Rural areas may have travel surcharges but lower base rates.
Panel Upgrade Cost by Ontario Region (100A → 200A)
Here’s how upgrading an electrical panel cost compares across major Ontario regions for the most common 100A to 200A upgrade:
💡 Ottawa Homeowners: Save by Bundling
If you’re upgrading your panel to support an EV charger, solar panels, or a home renovation, bundling the panel upgrade with the new installation saves on combined labour — often $300–$600 compared to doing them separately.
Get Your Exact Panel Upgrade Cost
Free on-site panel assessment. We inspect, calculate, and quote — no surprises.
Do You Actually Need a Panel Upgrade? 6 Signs to Watch For
Not every home needs an upgrade. Here are the signs that your panel has reached its limit:
Breakers Trip Frequently
If you’re resetting breakers regularly — especially when running the AC, dryer, or microwave simultaneously — your panel is overloaded. This is the most common sign. See our guide on electrical repair if you’re experiencing this.
You Still Have a Fuse Box
Screw-in fuses are a clear indicator your electrical system dates back to the 1950s–1970s. Fuse boxes are typically 60A and cannot be expanded — they must be replaced entirely with a modern breaker panel.
You’re Adding Major Appliances
EV chargers (40–60A), electric ranges (40–50A), hot tubs (50A), heat pumps (30–60A), or backup generators all require dedicated circuits. If your panel doesn’t have room, you need an upgrade.
Flickering or Dimming Lights
Lights that dim when the AC kicks on or when you run the microwave indicate voltage drops from an overloaded panel. This is a safety concern and should be addressed promptly.
You’re Selling Your Home
Home inspectors flag outdated panels. A 60A fuse box or an overloaded 100A panel can reduce your home’s sale price by $5,000–$15,000 or scare off buyers entirely. A panel upgrade removes a major objection and demonstrates the home is modern and safe.
Insurance Issues
Some Ontario insurers charge higher premiums — or refuse coverage — for homes with 60A panels, fuse boxes, or known hazardous panels (Federal Pacific, Zinsco). An upgrade can lower your insurance premiums and protect your coverage.
⚠️ Federal Pacific & Zinsco Panels: Replace Immediately
If your Ontario home has a Federal Pacific (Stab-Lok) or Zinsco panel, replace it regardless of amperage. These panels have documented failure rates — breakers that don’t trip during overloads, creating serious fire risks. Insurance companies increasingly refuse to cover homes with these panels. A replacement should be treated as urgent, not optional.
Hidden Costs to Watch For When Getting Panel Upgrade Quotes
When comparing electrical panel upgrade cost quotes from Ontario electricians, watch for these items that cheaper quotes often exclude:
❌ ESA Permit Not Included
Some electricians quote labour only. The ESA permit ($100–$250) is mandatory — if it’s not in the quote, your “cheap” upgrade isn’t legal or insurable.
❌ Service Entrance Surprises
If your service entrance cable or meter base needs replacing, that’s $400–$1,100 extra. A thorough electrician identifies this upfront — a less experienced one discovers it mid-job.
❌ Code Correction Extras
Old panels often hide code violations — double-tapped breakers, missing grounds, improper bonding. These must be fixed to pass ESA inspection. Reputable electricians include an allowance for this.
The Panel Upgrade Process in Ontario: What to Expect
Here’s how a typical electrical panel upgrade works from start to finish:
Assessment
Inspect panel, calculate load, determine scope, provide written quote.
Permits & Scheduling
File ESA notification, coordinate utility disconnect if needed.
Installation
Power off 4–8 hours. Remove old panel, install new panel, reconnect all circuits, test.
ESA Inspection
ESA inspects the work, confirms code compliance, issues certificate.
For the full Ontario Electrical Safety Code requirements, visit the Electrical Safety Authority. For information on federal home energy retrofit grants that may offset some costs, check Natural Resources Canada’s Greener Homes Initiative.
Why Ottawa Homeowners Choose Ottawa Electric Service for Panel Upgrades
If you’re in Ottawa or Eastern Ontario, our ESA-certified electricians specialize in panel upgrades:
- Transparent, all-in pricing — panel, breakers, labour, ESA permit, and inspection included in every quote
- Same-week availability — most upgrades completed within 3–7 days of your call
- Hydro Ottawa coordination — we handle all utility disconnect/reconnect scheduling
- Free on-site assessment — we inspect your panel, calculate your current and future load, and recommend the right upgrade
- Future-proofing — we size your panel for planned EV chargers, surge protection, and wiring upgrades so you don’t pay twice
Panel Upgrade Service Areas
Ottawa Electric Service performs panel upgrades across the greater Ottawa region:
Frequently Asked Questions: Electrical Panel Upgrade Cost
How much does an electrical panel upgrade cost in Ontario?
The most common upgrade (100A to 200A) costs $2,500–$4,500 in Ontario, including panel, labour, ESA permit, and inspection. Costs vary by region: the GTA runs $3,000–$5,000, while Ottawa and other Ontario cities average $2,500–$4,000. Upgrades from 60A to 200A cost $3,500–$5,500.
How long does a panel upgrade take?
The actual installation takes 4–8 hours for a standard 100A to 200A upgrade. Your power will be off for most of this time. If a service entrance replacement or utility coordination is needed, the project may span two visits. From booking to completion: typically 1–3 weeks, with most of the wait time being utility scheduling.
Do I need an ESA permit for a panel upgrade in Ontario?
Yes — all electrical panel upgrades in Ontario require an Electrical Safety Authority notification and inspection. This is not optional. Your electrician files the notification before work begins and arranges the post-installation inspection. Skipping this step can void your home insurance and create serious liability exposure.
Is a 200-amp panel enough for a modern home?
For most Ontario homes, yes. A 200A panel comfortably supports central AC, electric dryer, electric range, an EV charger, and standard household loads. Only homes with multiple high-demand items (e.g., two EV chargers + hot tub + electric heating) might need 400A service, which is rare for residential properties.
Will Hydro Ottawa (or my utility) charge for the service upgrade?
Most Ontario utilities, including Hydro Ottawa, upgrade the service drop (the wire from the pole to your home) at no charge when you upgrade from 100A to 200A. However, scheduling can take 2–6 weeks. Underground service upgrades may incur additional costs. Your electrician coordinates all utility interaction as part of the project.
Can I upgrade my panel myself to save money?
No. In Ontario, all electrical panel work must be performed by a licensed electrician and inspected by the ESA. DIY electrical panel work is illegal, dangerous (you’re working with live 200A service), voids your insurance, and won’t pass inspection. There is no scenario where this is advisable.
Does a panel upgrade increase home value?
Yes. A modern 200A panel is a selling feature that home inspectors and buyers look for. An outdated 60A fuse box can reduce a home’s value by $5,000–$15,000 and deter buyers. The upgrade typically costs less than the value it adds — making it one of the better ROI home improvements.
What’s the difference between a panel upgrade and a panel replacement?
They often overlap. A “panel upgrade” typically means increasing amperage (e.g., 100A to 200A), which always involves installing a new, larger panel. A “panel replacement” means swapping a damaged or recalled panel (e.g., Federal Pacific) for a new one at the same amperage. In practice, most electricians recommend upgrading to 200A during any replacement since the labour cost difference is minimal.
What are the cheapest and most expensive panel upgrades?
The cheapest common upgrade is a sub-panel installation ($1,000–$2,500) — adding a secondary panel for a garage, basement, or addition without upgrading the main service. The most expensive is a full 60A-to-200A upgrade with service entrance replacement and panel relocation, which can reach $5,000–$7,000+ in complex situations.
Should I upgrade to 200A even if I don’t need it right now?
If you’re already paying for an electrician to open up your panel, upgrading to 200A is almost always worth it. The incremental cost of going from 100A to 200A versus just replacing a 100A panel is often only $500–$1,000 more — and it future-proofs your home for EV chargers, heat pumps, and other upgrades that are increasingly common in Ontario.
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