Home Cost Report

Electrical panel replacement cost

Electrical panel replacement costs about $900 to $4,000, with a typical price around $1,500 (as of June 2026).

Replacing or upgrading a home's main electrical panel (breaker box).

Replacing a main electrical panel runs about $900–$2,200 for most homes, averaging around $1,500 — a like-for-like swap at the low end, a standard 200-amp upgrade ($1,300–$2,000) in the middle. Big service upgrades (new meter base, a 400-amp panel, rewiring) or high-cost metros can reach $4,000 or more.

Low
$900
Typical
$1,500
High
$4,000

Estimate your electrical panel replacement

Adjust for amperage and scope. The estimate starts from our published range.

Adjusts the estimate to local cost levels. Pick a metro or leave on national.

Estimated cost for your options
$900$4,000
Typical: $1,500

How we got this

Starts from our published electrical panel replacement range of $900–$4,000, adjusted for:

  • Service size: 200-amp (standard upgrade)×1
  • Scope of work: Panel swap only×1
  • Access: Easy access×1

These figures are planning estimates compiled from public cost data on the dates shown — not quotes, bids, or guarantees. Real prices vary widely with your home, location, materials, permits, and contractor. Always get itemized written quotes from licensed local pros before budgeting or hiring.

Where the money goes

  • Panel + breakers (hardware)

    Often the smaller share of the bill.

    20%40%
  • Labor, permit & inspection

    The largest share — plus any meter base, grounding, or wiring upgrades.

    60%80%

What changes the price

  • Service amperageRaises cost

    Upgrading from 100 to 200 amps — or to 400 amps for a large home — raises cost.

  • Meter base / service mastRaises cost

    Replacing the meter base or service mast alongside the panel adds labor and utility coordination.

  • Permit & inspectionRaises cost

    Panel work requires a permit and inspection in most areas, built into the quote.

  • Old or aluminum wiringRaises cost

    Bringing old or aluminum wiring up to code adds significant cost.

  • Panel brandVaries

    Some brands and smart panels cost more than standard ones.

Get real quotes for your electrical panel replacement

Our ranges are for planning. The only way to know your real price is itemized quotes from licensed local pros — always get at least three before you hire.

Tip: search for licensed, insured electrical panel replacement contractors in your area, check reviews and references, and compare written itemized bids — not just bottom-line numbers.

Electrical panel replacement cost — FAQ

How much does it cost to replace an electrical panel?
Most homeowners pay about $900–$2,200 to replace an electrical panel, averaging around $1,500 — a standard 200-amp upgrade typically lands $1,300–$2,000. Big service upgrades (new meter base, a 400-amp panel, rewiring) or high-cost metros can reach $4,000 or more. Labor, permits, and the meter/service work — not the panel hardware — are the biggest part of the cost.
How much is a 200-amp panel upgrade?
A 200-amp panel upgrade typically runs $1,300–$2,000. The price depends on whether the meter base and service mast also need work, your local permit fees, and the condition of the existing wiring; difficult installs or high-cost metros run higher.
Do I need a permit to replace an electrical panel?
Almost always yes — panel work requires a permit and inspection in most jurisdictions, and that cost is built into a licensed electrician's quote. Skipping the permit risks insurance and resale problems.
Should I upgrade to 200 amps?
Many older homes have 100-amp service, which can be tight for modern loads like EV chargers, heat pumps, and large appliances. Upgrading to 200 amps future-proofs the home, which is why it's the most common panel replacement.

Electrical panel replacement cost by city

Costs vary by metro. See electrical panel replacement pricing adjusted to local levels:

Cost data compiled June 13, 2026.

Sources (2)

Range synthesized from the editorially-independent cluster (Angi $518–$2,189, avg ~$1,344, with 200-amp upgrades $1,300–$2,000). Two contractor-blog sources that quoted $1,300–$3,000 were de-weighted as high-biased, not used as the anchor — they had inflated the earlier $2,200 average. Metro-level breakdowns are coming as we verify local data.