G & S Electric
1824 E Ronald Rd , Phoenix, AZ 85022-5716
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Electrician, Electrical Contractors, Solar Energy Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
How long does how long does electrical panel upgrade take take in Phoenix? Project timelines depend on scope, crew size, and weather. Get a realistic schedule from any of 52 licensed contractors before work begins.
Typical cost in Phoenix
$1,200–$4,500 / project
52 contractors in Phoenix
1824 E Ronald Rd , Phoenix, AZ 85022-5716
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Electrician, Electrical Contractors, Solar Energy Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
PO Box 46213 , Phoenix, AZ 85063-6213
BBB Accredited A rated. Electrical Contractors, Electrical, Web Designer
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
1010 E Missouri Ave , Phoenix, AZ 85014-2602
Electrician, Electrical Contractors, Electrical ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85017-2515
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Electrician, Electrical Contractors, Electrical Wiring ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85017-4250
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Electrical Contractors, Electrician, Commercial Electrician
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
475 , Phoenix, AZ 85016-4126
Electrician, Electrical Contractors, Electrical Wiring ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
4020 N 16th St , Phoenix, AZ 85016-5920
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Commercial Electrician, Electrician, Electrical Contractors
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
4009 N 31st Ave , Phoenix, AZ 85017-4619
Electrical Wiring, Electrician, Electrical Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
2702 N 3rd St Ste 2020 , Phoenix, AZ 85004-4606
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Business Associations, Electrical Contractors, Energy Management Consultant
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
9214 N 5th Ave , Phoenix, AZ 85021-3515
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Electrical Contractors, Commercial Contractors, Electrical Wiring ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85022-5036
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Data Communication Equipment, Electrical Contractors, Electrical Wiring ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
8836 N 23rd Ave Ste B3, Phoenix AZ 85021
Licensed electrician serving Phoenix AZ and surrounding areas. Services include electrical panel upgrades, service upgrades, and electric¦
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
For: 200-amp panel upgrade in Phoenix, AZ
Phoenix's unique combination of extreme summer cooling demand, among the highest US residential solar adoption rates, and rapid EV vehicle growth makes electrical panel upgrades one of the most in-demand home improvement services in the Valley of the Sun. A 2025 Phoenix home with a 100-amp service panel is frequently inadequate for current electrical loads, let alone the addition of an EV charger or solar + battery storage system. Here's what panel upgrades cost in the Phoenix metro in 2025.
| Service | Scope | Phoenix Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| 100A → 200A panel upgrade | Standard residential upgrade | $1,800 – $3,500 |
| 200A → 400A panel upgrade | Large home or solar/EV prep | $3,500 – $7,500 |
| Subpanel installation | Add 60–100A subpanel | $900 – $2,500 |
| EV charger circuit (Level 2) | 50A or 60A dedicated circuit | $400 – $1,200 |
| Solar-ready panel upgrade | 200A with solar interconnect prep | $2,200 – $4,500 |
| Battery backup (Powerwall) interconnect | Interconnect to existing panel | $1,000 – $3,000 |
| Full panel replacement (same amperage) | Aging panel, new breakers | $1,500 – $3,000 |
| Whole-home generator transfer switch | Manual or automatic | $800 – $2,500 |
| Main breaker upgrade | 150A → 200A at existing panel | $500 – $1,200 |
| Meter base upgrade (utility coordination) | APS/SRP coordination required | $500 – $1,500 |
Arizona's favorable EV ownership environment (no EV registration tax in AZ, year-round charging weather, extensive Supercharger/DC Fast Charge infrastructure in the Maricopa County grid) has produced one of the highest per-capita EV adoption rates in the US. Level 2 EV charging (240V, typically 50A or 60A circuit) requires a dedicated circuit that many Phoenix homes built before 2010 cannot support on a 100-amp service panel running full summer A/C load. The dedicated EV circuit addition is the #1 driver of Phoenix panel upgrades — often revealing that the full panel upgrade from 100A to 200A is simultaneously necessary.
Phoenix averages 299 sunny days per year — the highest among major US cities. Arizona's residential solar market (both APS and SRP territories) has made Phoenix one of the highest solar-penetration metros nationally. Solar interconnection to a standard residential panel requires:
Many Phoenix 200A panels don't require full upgrade for solar — but busbar capacity and physical breaker space must be assessed. A 100A panel almost always requires upgrade to accommodate any production-size solar system (5+ kW).
Phoenix's bifurcated utility geography — Arizona Public Service (APS) serving the north/west valley and much of Phoenix proper; Salt River Project (SRP) serving the east valley (Tempe, Scottsdale, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, Queen Creek) — creates different panel upgrade processes:
Your Phoenix electrical contractor must know which territory your home sits in and coordinate with the correct utility. This is routine for established Phoenix electricians — but confirm your contractor explicitly discusses utility coordination during the quote.
Per BLS Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler MSA, licensed electricians (SOC 47-2111) earn $28–$50/hour.
Panel upgrades are among the highest-risk residential electrical projects — a failed or improperly installed panel is a fire and electrocution hazard. Arizona regulates electrical contractors through two mechanisms:
The Arizona ROC issues contractor licenses for electrical work. Relevant classifications:
Any Phoenix electrical contractor performing a panel upgrade must hold an active ROC license. Verify at roc.az.gov — check active status, bond and insurance status, and complaint history. ROC complaints for electrical contractors are serious — they typically involve deficient work, insurance failures, or contract violations.
The Arizona Department of Fire, Buildings and Life Safety oversees the electrical code (NEC as adopted in Arizona). Panel upgrades always require a permit in Phoenix — issued by the City of Phoenix Development Services Department for properties within city limits. The permit process:
Never hire a Phoenix electrician who suggests bypassing the permit process for a panel upgrade. An uninspected panel upgrade: (a) creates fire risk if NEC violations went undetected, (b) voids homeowner's insurance for any fire originating in the electrical system (policy exclusion for unpermitted work), and (c) creates undisclosed material defect disclosure liability at property sale.
1. Which ROC license classification do you hold? CR-11 (Residential) is sufficient for single-family panel upgrades; A-12 (General) covers both. Verify the license number directly at roc.az.gov — don't rely solely on a contractor's claim.
2. Do you coordinate with APS or SRP for the utility-side work? Any panel upgrade affecting the service entrance (100A → 200A changes the meter base in most cases) requires utility coordination. A Phoenix electrician who doesn't mention APS/SRP coordination for a service entrance upgrade is either not aware of the requirement or planning to skip it.
3. What NEC rule applies to my solar backfeed breaker location? If you have or plan solar: NEC 690.64 requires the solar interconnect breaker to be at the opposite end of the panel bus from the main breaker, and the total load capacity cannot exceed 120% of the panel's bus rating. A Phoenix electrician working in the solar market should answer this question fluently.
4. Can my home's weather head and conduit handle 200A service? In Phoenix's older housing stock (particularly pre-1980 ranges homes throughout south Phoenix, central Phoenix, and Glendale), the weather head and service entrance conduit may need upgrade from 100A to 200A clearances — this is part of, not separate from, a proper panel upgrade quote.
Selecting the correct panel amperage for a Phoenix home requires calculating current and anticipated electrical load against the Valley's specific demand patterns — dominated by summer A/C consumption, EV charging, and the solar landscape. Here's a definitive Phoenix-specific sizing guide.
| Panel Size | Monthly A/C Load Support | EV Charger (Level 2) | Solar System | Typical Phoenix Fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100A (current in older homes) | Marginal — runs A/C with limited simultaneous loads | ❌ Level 2 EV charger not recommended at 100A | ❌ Cannot support most production solar systems | Pre-1985 homes; no EV, no solar; limited loads |
| 150A | Adequate for modest homes < 2,000 sq ft | ⚠️ Possible with load management | ⚠️ Small solar (3–4 kW) possible | Narrow fit — typically upgraded in full 200A |
| 200A | ✅ Full A/C support for Phoenix 2,000–3,500 sq ft | ✅ Level 2 EV charger without issue | ✅ 5–15 kW solar systems (most residential) | Standard modern Phoenix single-family home |
| 400A | ✅ Full A/C for large homes; multi-unit; dual-EV | ✅ Multiple EV chargers simultaneously | ✅ Large solar arrays; battery banks | Large homes (4,000+ sq ft), dual EV households, Airbnb/rental with high loads, detached workshop |
A Phoenix 3-ton central A/C system (appropriate for a 1,500–2,000 sq ft home) draws approximately 28–30 amps at 240V at startup and 18–22 amps continuous. A 4-ton unit draws more. In summer, Phoenix homes run A/C continuously for 5–7 months — with A/C, standard appliances (refrigerator, washer/dryer, dishwasher, oven), and EV charging all occurring simultaneously during peak afternoon hours, a 100-amp service panel (100A × 80% continuous load rule = 80 amp usable) cannot safely accommodate all loads concurrently.
The simultaneous afternoon peak in Phoenix (3–7 PM):
Total: 80–100A — at the absolute limit of 100A service, with zero safety margin.
For Phoenix homes wanting 400-amp service (two 200A panels or a single 400A meter base):
The APS/SRP coordination for 400A is more complex and time-consuming than a straight 200A upgrade — budget additional time (2–6 weeks for utility coordination) and verify your electrician has experience with 400A residential upgrades in the specific utility territory.
Since 2020, Maricopa County residential building code requires new single-family homes to be built solar-ready — including a conduit path from the roof to the electrical panel and an available breaker slot for solar interconnect. For resale Phoenix homes built before this requirement, retrofitting solar readiness during a panel upgrade is cost-effective: adding the conduit path and NEC-compliant backfeed breaker position during the panel upgrade adds minimal incremental cost vs. doing it after the panel work is complete.
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