Toronto, Ontario

Panel Upgrades
in Toronto

Toronto's older homes in Roncesvalles, The Junction, Leslieville, and East York are the primary source of panel upgrade work. Many still have 60-amp fuse boxes or outdated 100-amp panels. We upgrade to 200-amp breaker panels with full ESA permitting, coordinating with Toronto Hydro for service upgrades when needed.

ESA LicensedSame-day Toronto47 Google reviews180+ jobs in Toronto
(647) 872-9954

WHY CHOOSE US IN TORONTO

Local Electricians Who Know Toronto

Toronto's housing ranges from 1850s Victorians in Cabbagetown to 2020s condo towers in Liberty Village. The older neighbourhoods west and east of downtown have the highest concentration of knob-and-tube wiring, ungrounded outlets, and undersized panels. Postwar suburbs in North York and Scarborough face panel capacity issues as homeowners add EV chargers and home offices.

55-Minute Average Response

We batch Toronto appointments for efficiency. Most calls are serviced same-day, with a 55-minute average response time across the city.

ESA Licensed and Insured

Every Toronto job is ESA permitted and inspected. We carry $5M liability insurance, meeting the requirements of Toronto condo boards and property managers.

47 Five-Star Google Reviews

Our 5.0 rating reflects the care we put into every job, whether it is a condo panel in Liberty Village or a full rewire in The Beaches.

Every Property Type

Victorian semis, postwar bungalows, high-rise condos, commercial storefronts. We have worked on them all and understand the unique wiring challenges each one presents.

Neighbourhoods We Serve in Toronto

MidtownNorth YorkScarboroughEast YorkThe JunctionHigh ParkBloor West VillageParkdaleLeslievilleThe BeachesRoncesvallesCorso Italia

180+

Jobs in Toronto

Same-Day

Response time

47

5-star reviews

5+

Years serving GTA

THE SERVICE

Panel Upgrades — What's Included

What Is an Electrical Panel Upgrade?

Your electrical panel (also called a breaker box or distribution panel) is the central hub that distributes electricity to every room in your home. It takes the power coming in from the street and splits it into individual circuits for your lights, outlets, appliances, and heavy equipment like air conditioners and EV chargers. An electrical panel upgrade replaces your existing panel with a modern, higher-capacity unit. This usually means going from a 100 amp panel to a 200 amp panel, or replacing an outdated fuse box with a modern breaker panel. For homeowners in Brampton, Mississauga, and the surrounding GTA, a panel upgrade is one of the most important electrical investments you can make. Older homes built before the 1990s were wired for a different era. They did not account for EV chargers, home offices with multiple monitors, hot tubs, or the dozens of devices a modern family uses daily. When your panel cannot keep up, you get tripping breakers, flickering lights, and real safety risks.

7 Signs You Need an Electrical Panel Upgrade

1. Breakers tripping frequently. If you are resetting breakers every week, your panel is overloaded and cannot safely distribute power to your circuits. 2. Flickering or dimming lights. Lights that dim when your dryer, AC, or another large appliance kicks on indicate your panel is struggling to deliver enough current. 3. You still have a Federal Pioneer panel. Federal Pioneer panels were installed in hundreds of thousands of Canadian homes between the 1950s and 1990s. Many of these panels have breakers that fail to trip during overloads, creating a serious fire risk. If you have a Federal Pioneer panel, replacement is strongly recommended. 4. Your home still uses a fuse box. Fuse boxes were the standard before circuit breaker panels. They are not designed for modern electrical loads and most insurance companies in Ontario will flag them. 5. You have knob-and-tube wiring. If your home still has knob-and-tube wiring, a panel upgrade is typically part of the rewiring process to bring your home up to current Ontario Electrical Safety Code. 6. You are planning a renovation or addition. Adding a basement apartment, garage workshop, kitchen remodel, or any major renovation almost always requires more electrical capacity. 7. You want to install an EV charger or hot tub. A Level 2 EV charger draws 30 to 50 amps on its own. A hot tub draws 40 to 50 amps. If your 100 amp panel is already near capacity, you will need a 200 amp upgrade before these can be installed safely.

100 Amp vs 200 Amp Panel - Which Do You Need?

Most older homes in Brampton were built with 100 amp electrical service. That was enough for the appliances and lighting of the 1970s and 1980s, but it falls short today. A 200 amp panel upgrade gives you roughly double the electrical capacity. You need a 200 amp upgrade if you are adding an EV charger, hot tub, or pool heater, your home has electric heating or a workshop with power tools, you are finishing a basement or adding an addition, you run multiple high-draw appliances at the same time (dryer, AC, oven, dishwasher), or your insurance company is requiring a panel upgrade. For smaller homes with gas heating and no plans for major additions, a 100 amp panel replacement (swapping an old panel for a new 100 amp unit) may be sufficient. During your $49 assessment, we evaluate your current usage and future plans and recommend the right size. The $49 is credited toward your project if you move forward.

Federal Pioneer Panel Replacement

Federal Pioneer is one of the most common panel brands found in older Canadian homes. The problem is that many Federal Pioneer Stab-Lok breakers have a documented failure rate. They can fail to trip during an overload or short circuit, which means the breaker does not do its job of protecting your wiring from overheating. This is a fire hazard. If you open your panel and see the Federal Pioneer or Stab-Lok name, we strongly recommend a panel replacement. We have replaced hundreds of Federal Pioneer panels across Brampton, Mississauga, and Vaughan. The process typically takes one day. We remove the old panel and breakers, install a new panel from a trusted manufacturer (Siemens, Square D, or Eaton), reconnect all your circuits, and schedule the ESA inspection. You get a modern panel with arc-fault protection and a certificate of inspection for your records and insurance.

The Panel Upgrade Process - What to Expect

Every panel upgrade we do follows the same proven process. First, you book a $49 on-site assessment. A licensed electrician inspects your current panel, tests capacity, checks the meter base, and discusses your current and future electrical needs. The $49 fee is credited toward your project. Second, you receive a detailed written quote. We break down every line item so you know exactly what you are paying for. No hidden fees, no surprises. Third, on installation day, our ESA-licensed electricians arrive on time and get to work. Power is typically off for 4 to 6 hours during the swap. Most panel upgrades are completed in a single day. Fourth, the Electrical Safety Authority (ESA) inspects the finished work. This is a mandatory step in Ontario for any panel upgrade. We handle the entire permit and inspection process. Fifth, you receive your ESA certificate of inspection. This document proves your panel meets current Ontario Electrical Safety Code standards. Keep it on file for your insurance company and for future home sales.

Electrical Panel Upgrade Cost in Ontario

Most panel upgrades in Brampton cost between $1,500 and $4,500, depending on panel size, permit fees, and existing wiring condition. A straight 100A panel swap on a simple job comes in at the lower end. A 100A to 200A upgrade with meter base replacement and additional circuits is at the higher end. Panel upgrade costs vary depending on the scope of work. Factors that affect pricing include the amperage change (100A to 200A costs more than a straight 100A panel swap), whether the meter base needs replacement, the number of additional circuits required, accessibility of the panel location, and whether the service entrance cable from the street needs upgrading. Rather than guessing at a number, the best approach is to book a $49 on-site assessment. You get an exact quote based on your specific home. The $49 is credited toward your project if you proceed. We also offer Financeit financing so you can spread the cost over monthly payments with approved credit. Every quote includes the ESA permit, inspection, and certificate of inspection at no extra charge.

Why Brampton Homeowners Choose Superior Power Electric

Superior Power Electric is led by Shaun Pennant, a licensed electrician with over 15 years in the trade. We hold ESA/ECRA License #7014710, which means every panel upgrade we complete is inspected and certified by the Electrical Safety Authority. We have 47 five-star Google reviews from homeowners across Brampton and the GTA. We show up on time, give honest quotes, and finish the job right the first time. We serve Brampton, Mississauga, Vaughan, Caledon, Georgetown, and Oakville. Whether you need a Federal Pioneer panel replacement, a 100 amp to 200 amp upgrade, or a fuse box conversion, call (647) 872-9954 or book your $49 assessment online.

Recent Panel Upgrade Projects in the GTA

A Bramalea homeowner called us after their breaker kept tripping every time the dryer ran. We arrived and found a 60-amp fuse box from the 1960s still feeding a 4-bedroom home. We upgraded to a 200-amp panel the same day, added a dedicated 30-amp laundry circuit, and installed whole-home surge protection. The job took six hours. In Brampton's Bram East area, a homeowner had just purchased a 1978 bungalow and wanted to add an EV charger for their Tesla. Their Federal Pioneer panel could not support the load. We replaced the panel with a new 200-amp Square D unit, pulled the ESA permit, and had the EV charger rough-in done in a single day. A Mississauga homeowner near Streetsville was finishing their basement and needed a subpanel to handle the new circuits. Their existing 100-amp main panel had only two breaker spaces remaining. We upgraded the main to 200-amp, installed a 60-amp subpanel in the basement, and ran four new circuits for the gym, media room, and dedicated office - all in one project. A Vaughan detached home had lights flickering throughout the second floor. The assessment revealed undersized breakers and a loose main connection inside the Federal Pioneer panel. We replaced the panel entirely rather than attempt repairs on a panel with documented failure history, and the homeowner's insurance company accepted the ESA certificate to update their policy.

How We Handle the ESA Permit and Inspection Process

In Ontario, every electrical panel upgrade requires an ESA (Electrical Safety Authority) permit and a post-installation inspection. This is not optional, and skipping it creates serious problems - an unpermitted panel upgrade can void your home insurance, create issues when you sell, and leave you liable if an electrical fault occurs after the work. We handle the entire permit and inspection process as part of every panel upgrade we complete. Here is how it works. Before installation, we pull the ESA permit online. The permit number is recorded on the work order. On installation day, we complete the upgrade, connect all circuits, and restore power. Within a few days, the ESA schedules an inspection at your home. An ESA inspector arrives, reviews the installation, and either passes it or issues a correction notice. In over five years of panel upgrades across Brampton and the GTA, we have a clean inspection record. Once the inspection passes, you receive an ESA Certificate of Inspection. This document is your proof that the work meets Ontario Electrical Safety Code. Keep it with your home documents - you will need it when your insurance company asks for proof of upgrade and when you eventually sell the home.

TORONTO ELECTRICAL REALITIES

What Toronto Homeowners Deal With

Every city has its own electrical quirks. Here's what we see most often in Toronto.

Knob-and-Tube Wiring in Century Homes

Toronto has thousands of homes built before 1940 that still have active knob-and-tube wiring. This wiring was not designed for modern loads and degrades with age. Insurance companies are increasingly refusing to insure homes with active knob-and-tube. Removal requires careful work to avoid damaging original plaster and trim.

Condo Panel Capacity Limits

Many Toronto condos were built with 100-amp suite panels that are already near capacity. Adding an EV charger, induction cooktop, or electric dryer requires load calculations and sometimes a panel upgrade. Condo boards have their own approval processes that add time and complexity.

Underground Service Upgrades

Older Toronto homes often have overhead electrical service from Toronto Hydro. Upgrading to 200-amp service sometimes requires converting to underground feed, which involves coordination with the utility and trenching work. This adds cost and timeline but is necessary for modern electrical demands.

Unpermitted Renovation Wiring

Decades of renovations in Toronto homes have left layers of unpermitted electrical work. We frequently find circuits tapped off other circuits, undersized wire for the load, and junction boxes buried behind drywall. A proper inspection and remediation brings everything up to current code.

EV Charging in Older Neighbourhoods

Toronto homeowners with garages in older areas like The Beaches, Leslieville, and The Junction often need a panel upgrade before they can add an EV charger circuit. The 60 or 100-amp panels in these homes were not designed for the 50-amp draw of a Level 2 charger.

Aging Federal Pioneer Panels

Homes built in Toronto between 1975 and 1990 frequently have Federal Pioneer Stab-Lok panels with a documented history of breaker failure. These panels are flagged during home inspections and should be replaced proactively.

FAQ

Panel Upgrades in Toronto - Common Questions

NEARBY CITIES

Panel Upgrades in Nearby GTA Cities

We serve Toronto and the surrounding area. Same ESA-licensed team, same quality.

MORE SERVICES IN TORONTO

Other Electrical Services We Offer in Toronto

Emergency Electrician

Electrical emergencies in Toronto - from a sparking panel in The Junction to a complete outage in Leslieville - get a 24/7 response. We work in all Toronto neighborhoods, including older homes with knob-and-tube and aluminum wiring where emergencies carry higher risk. Licensed, permitted, same day.

Knob-and-Tube Replacement

Toronto has one of the highest concentrations of knob-and-tube wiring in Ontario. Homes in The Annex, Cabbagetown, Parkdale, and Roncesvalles were built when this wiring method was standard. We carefully remove all active knob-and-tube and install new copper wiring without unnecessary damage to original plaster and woodwork.

Pot Light Installation

Pot lights are the most popular lighting upgrade in renovated Toronto homes. Whether it is a Victorian kitchen renovation in Leslieville or a basement finishing in Scarborough, slim LED pot lights transform the space. We install 12 to 20 lights per project on average.

EV Charger Installation

Toronto's EV adoption is growing fast, and homeowners with garages are adding Level 2 chargers. In older neighbourhoods, this often requires a panel upgrade first. For condo residents, we work with building management to install chargers in parking garages with proper metering and load management.

Whole-Home Rewiring

Toronto homes built before 1960 often need complete rewiring. We replace outdated copper, aluminum, or knob-and-tube wiring with modern NMD90 copper, add grounding throughout, and upgrade the panel to 200 amps. This work is especially common in East York, The Danforth, and High Park.

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Panel Upgrades in Toronto - Booked Fast

$49 on-site assessment credited toward your project. ESA-licensed, fully insured. Same-day service available.

Same-day TorontoNo fix, no feeESA inspection included
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