Electrical Panel Upgrades in Los Angeles Remodels: When You Need 200 Amps and What It Costs

A 200-amp electrical upgrade is not automatically required for every Los Angeles remodel. Learn how planned appliances, EV charging, HVAC,…

Electrical panel upgrade for 200 amp

Electrical capacity should be reviewed before appliances, HVAC equipment, EV charging, or an addition is finalized. Otherwise, homeowners may select systems that the existing panel or utility service cannot adequately support.

A Los Angeles remodel may need a 200-amp upgrade when the calculated electrical demand exceeds the existing service, the panel cannot accept required circuits, or the project adds several high-demand electric systems. However, 200 amps is not automatically required. The answer depends on the load calculation, equipment selections, panel condition, and utility connection.

Projects that modify electrical loads, meters, panels, or service equipment may also require coordination with the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety and LADWP construction services.

What Does a 200-Amp Electrical Panel Actually Provide?

A 200-amp system gives a home more electrical capacity than a 100-, 125-, or 150-amp system. That added capacity can make it easier to accommodate multiple major electric loads, but the number on the panel is only part of the system.

Electrical Panel Rating vs. Electrical Service Capacity

The electrical panel distributes incoming power among the home’s individual circuits. The electrical service includes the utility connection, meter, service conductors, main disconnect, grounding system, and related equipment.

Installing a panel rated for 200 amps does not necessarily mean the property can receive 200-amp service. The following components may require evaluation:

  • Main panel and main breaker
  • Meter enclosure
  • Service entrance conductors
  • Grounding and bonding
  • Utility connection
  • Available breaker spaces
  • Existing wiring and equipment condition

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s residential panel guidance similarly distinguishes the home’s panel from the upstream utility equipment supplying it.

Comparing 100-Amp, 125-Amp, 150-Amp, and 200-Amp Service

Service rating General planning context Potential limitations
100 amps May support a targeted remodel when few substantial loads are added and existing capacity is confirmed Can become constrained when several electric appliances, HVAC systems, or chargers are added
125 amps Provides somewhat more capacity than a 100-amp service May still have limited flexibility for extensive electrification
150 amps May accommodate a broader remodeling scope when the load calculation supports it Less future flexibility than 200 amps
200 amps Provides greater flexibility for multiple substantial loads and future circuits May require meter, conductor, grounding, or utility-side modifications

These are planning distinctions, not final code determinations. A professional load calculation is still required.

When Does a Los Angeles Remodel Need a 200-Amp Upgrade?

Signs Your Remodel May Need 200 Amps

  1. The calculated electrical demand exceeds the existing service.
  2. Several high-demand electric systems are being added.
  3. The project includes an addition, ADU, or major garage conversion.
  4. The existing panel is full, damaged, improperly modified, or unsuitable for required breakers.
  5. The planned layout requires the panel or meter to be relocated.
  6. Future electrification is an important project goal.

Your Existing Panel Cannot Support the Calculated Electrical Load

A residential load calculation estimates how much power the home is expected to demand under applicable electrical-code rules. It does not simply add every appliance’s maximum rating as though all equipment will always operate at full power simultaneously.

California’s current statewide code cycle is the 2025 California Building Standards Code, effective January 1, 2026. Part 3 is the California Electrical Code. Local amendments and project-specific requirements may also apply.

A qualified electrical professional should evaluate the proposed remodel under the applicable code rather than relying on panel age, home size, or a simplified online formula.

You Are Adding Several High-Demand Electric Systems

A load assessment becomes particularly important when the project includes several of the following:

  • Level 2 EV charging
  • Heat-pump HVAC
  • Electric or heat-pump water heating
  • Induction cooking
  • Electric clothes drying
  • Pool or spa equipment
  • Sauna or steam-shower equipment
  • Workshop machinery
  • Solar or battery equipment requiring panel modifications

Homeowners considering HVAC electrification can also review SB Remodeling’s guide to heat-pump HVAC upgrades for Los Angeles homes.

You Are Building an Addition or ADU

A new bedroom alone does not automatically require 200 amps. The complete scope matters, including lighting, receptacles, HVAC, water heating, laundry equipment, cooking appliances, and other planned loads.

Depending on the design, an ADU or garage-conversion project could involve a subpanel, a separate meter arrangement, or a larger electrical service. Those decisions should be coordinated before construction documents are finalized.

Your Existing Panel Is Full, Damaged, or Incompatible With the Remodel

Replacement or modification may be appropriate when the panel has:

  • No usable circuit spaces
  • Corrosion, heat damage, or deterioration
  • Improper previous alterations
  • Compatibility problems with required breakers
  • A location that conflicts with the new floor plan
  • Insufficient working clearance

A full panel does not automatically require 200-amp service. A subpanel or another properly designed solution may create the needed circuit space.

When You May Not Need 200 Amps

You May Not Need 200 Amps If

  • The load calculation confirms adequate existing capacity.
  • The remodel adds few substantial electrical loads.
  • Major heating, cooking, or water-heating equipment remains gas-powered.
  • Lower-demand equipment is selected.
  • The existing panel is serviceable and has usable circuit space.
  • An approved load-management strategy addresses simultaneous demand.

The California Energy Commission advises homeowners to develop a whole-home electrification plan before assuming panel upsizing is necessary.

The Load Calculation Shows Adequate Existing Capacity

Some 100- or 125-amp homes can support targeted improvements. A kitchen remodeling project that retains gas cooking and adds only modest electrical demand may differ substantially from a project adding induction cooking, electric water heating, HVAC electrification, and EV charging at the same time.

Load Management Can Control Simultaneous Demand

Potential options include:

  • EV energy-management systems
  • Automatic load shedding
  • Smart electrical panels
  • Controlled appliance scheduling
  • Approved circuit-sharing devices

These systems are engineered alternatives, not shortcuts around a load calculation, product instructions, permitting, or code requirements.

A Subpanel Solves Circuit-Space Problems

A subpanel provides additional breaker and circuit space. It does not increase the total electrical service available to the property.

If the service is already near its calculated capacity, installing a subpanel will not create additional utility power.

What Does a 200-Amp Panel Upgrade Cost in Los Angeles?

There is no reliable universal price for a 200-amp upgrade. As a statewide planning reference, the California Energy Commission says electrical-panel upsizing will likely cost approximately $2,000 to $6,000, depending in part on the home’s age. A Los Angeles project may fall within, below, or above that range depending on the actual scope.

Use a Scope-Based Estimate Instead of One Average Price

Upgrade level Typical scope Budget context
Panel replacement New panel and breakers in an acceptable existing location, without major utility changes May fall within the statewide planning range when conditions are straightforward
Full 200-amp service upgrade Panel, meter equipment, service conductors, grounding, permit, inspection, and utility coordination May reach the upper portion of or exceed the planning range
Complex service modification Relocation, underground service, trenching, finish restoration, structural work, extensive rewiring, or utility infrastructure changes Can exceed the statewide range substantially

The SB Remodeling cost calculator may help with preliminary budgeting for a larger remodeling project, but it is not a substitute for a written electrical proposal.

Cost Factors That Can Increase the Final Price

  1. Existing panel size and condition
  2. Overhead versus underground service
  3. Panel or meter relocation
  4. Distance from the utility connection
  5. Grounding and bonding corrections
  6. Meter, conduit, mast, or weatherhead replacement
  7. Breaker quantity and specifications
  8. Stucco, siding, drywall, paint, or landscaping repairs
  9. Existing wiring deficiencies
  10. Transformer, conduit, distribution-line, or street work

LADWP states that there are generally no utility installation charges when its existing service can support the new demand. Charges may arise when public-property conduit, transformer, distribution, or street work is required.

Costs That Should Be Clearly Identified in the Contractor’s Proposal

Confirm whether the proposal includes:

  • Permit fees and inspections
  • LADWP coordination and meter spotting
  • Utility disconnection and reconnection
  • Panel, breakers, meter equipment, and conductors
  • Grounding and bonding
  • Temporary power, when needed
  • Subpanel or branch-circuit work
  • Drywall, stucco, paint, or exterior repairs
  • Circuit labeling
  • Cleanup and disposal

Los Angeles Permits, LADWP Coordination, and Inspections

A Typical Los Angeles Panel-Upgrade Process

  1. Confirm the correct jurisdiction.
  2. Complete the load calculation and equipment design.
  3. Request an LADWP meter spot when applicable.
  4. Obtain the required electrical permit.
  5. Coordinate utility disconnection.
  6. Install the approved equipment.
  7. Complete the required inspection.
  8. Obtain authorization for reconnection.
  9. Restore permanent service.

Confirm the Correct Permitting Jurisdiction

LADBS handles permits within the City of Los Angeles. A property with a Los Angeles mailing address may instead be in unincorporated Los Angeles County or another incorporated city.

LA County Public Works states that electrical installation, alteration, reconstruction, or repair generally requires an electrical permit in the areas it serves. Homeowners should verify jurisdiction before relying on city-specific instructions.

SB Remodeling’s guide to Los Angeles remodeling permits and timelines provides additional planning context for projects involving multiple permits and trades.

Request the LADWP Meter Spot Before Installing the New Panel

LADWP requires a meter-spot request when a contractor or homeowner plans to install a new qualifying residential service panel.

The LADWP meter-spot process verifies an acceptable location before installation. LADWP currently describes qualifying residential meter spotting as a free service and states that an Electric Service Representative will schedule the site visit within 5 to 15 business days.

That is an agency estimate for the meter-spot visit, not a guaranteed panel-upgrade or remodeling timeline.

Complete the Permit, Inspection, and Utility Reconnection Sequence

Permitted work may need to remain visible until inspection. LADBS explains that work is not approved merely because a permit was issued. The completed work must be inspected and accepted.

Utility scheduling, corrections, service-equipment availability, and infrastructure work can affect the final sequence.

How to Coordinate the Panel Upgrade With the Remodel

Complete the Electrical Load Plan Before Finalizing Construction Documents

The plan should account for:

  • Current electrical loads
  • Appliance specifications
  • HVAC and water heating
  • EV charging
  • Solar and battery plans
  • Addition or ADU equipment
  • Reasonably anticipated future loads

Early load planning fits naturally within a coordinated remodeling design and construction process.

Confirm the Panel Location Before Framing and Exterior Work

The approved location may affect:

  • Cabinet layouts
  • Windows and doors
  • Exterior elevations
  • Working clearance
  • Utility access
  • Landscaping, fences, and gates
  • Property-line or fire-rated conditions

Moving the panel after framing, stucco, cabinets, or landscaping are complete can create avoidable demolition and repair work.

Schedule the Shutdown Around Critical Construction Work

Coordinate the power interruption with demolition, rough electrical work, HVAC commissioning, appliance installation, inspections, and occupancy needs.

Discuss refrigeration, home-office equipment, security systems, medical equipment, and any temporary-power requirements before the shutdown is scheduled.

Questions to Ask Before Approving a 200-Amp Upgrade

  1. Was a residential load calculation completed?
  2. Does the project require a panel replacement, service upgrade, or both?
  3. Can the utility connection support 200 amps?
  4. Is a new LADWP meter spot required?
  5. Can the panel remain in its current location?
  6. Are permits, inspections, and utility coordination included?
  7. Are grounding, bonding, breakers, and service conductors included?
  8. Could trenching, underground service, or transformer work be required?
  9. How will the shutdown be coordinated?
  10. Is load management a practical alternative?
  11. Who will complete finish repairs?
  12. Which future loads are included?

California homeowners can also use the Contractors State License Board’s hiring guidance to compare contractor classifications and verify licenses.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a 200-amp panel required for every Los Angeles remodel?

No. The required capacity depends on the calculated load, existing equipment, new appliances, HVAC, EV charging, additions, ADUs, and future plans. A smaller existing service may remain adequate when the calculation supports it.

Does a full electrical panel automatically mean I need 200 amps?

No. A subpanel may create additional circuit space when the overall service has adequate capacity. A subpanel does not increase the amount of power available from the utility.

Do I need an electrical permit for a panel upgrade in Los Angeles?

Electrical panel replacement and service modifications generally require an electrical permit. The issuing agency depends on whether the property is in the City of Los Angeles, unincorporated Los Angeles County, or another city.

Can an ADU use the home’s existing electrical panel?

Potentially. The answer depends on the ADU’s appliances, HVAC, water heating, cooking equipment, meter design, and the property’s existing capacity. A load calculation should be completed before the electrical design is finalized.

How long will the home be without power?

The outage depends on the installation scope, utility coordination, inspection sequence, and reconnection arrangements. The contractor should identify the anticipated shutdown window and contingency plan without promising a fixed restoration time.

Plan the Right Electrical Capacity for Your Los Angeles Remodel

Evaluate the Remodel as One Coordinated System

Before choosing 200-amp service:

  1. Review the floor plan, appliances, HVAC, water heating, EV charging, and future goals.
  2. Complete the load assessment before finalizing equipment or panel placement.
  3. Define the responsibilities of the general contractor, electrical contractor, designer, permitting agency, and LADWP.

Homeowners can schedule a virtual remodeling consultation to discuss how electrical capacity, layout, appliances, mechanical systems, permits, and construction sequencing may affect the overall scope.

A 200-amp electrical panel can provide valuable flexibility, but it should be selected because the remodel requires or benefits from that capacity, not because 200 amps is treated as a default for every Los Angeles home.

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