When to Upgrade Your Electrical Panel in Ontario: The 100-to-200 Amp Decision
·10 min read· Electrician
J
James KowalskiMaster Electrician
Published March 5, 2026
Key Takeaway
When to upgrade from 100 to 200 amp electrical panel in Ontario. Load calculation, EV charger requirements, ESA permits, and cost breakdown.
When to Upgrade Your Electrical Panel in Ontario: The 100-to-200 Amp Decision
The quick answer
In most Ontario homes built before 1990, 100 amps is often insufficient for modern electrification. If you are adding a Level 2 EV charger, a heat pump, or a basement suite, a 200-amp service upgrade is mandatory to meet the Ontario Electrical Safety Code (OESC). However, if your current panel is in good condition, has unused breaker slots, and your total load calculation remains under 80% of capacity, you can safely defer the upgrade.
Decision framework: The diagnostic flow for Ontario homeowners
Navigating the necessity of a panel upgrade requires an objective look at your home’s electrical load. Use this diagnostic framework to determine if you need immediate action or can wait.
If your panel is a Federal Pioneer (Stab-Lok) or Zinsco model regardless of age → Then you must replace it immediately. These panels have a documented history of failing to trip during overcurrent events, posing a severe fire risk. This is a non-negotiable safety upgrade ($2,800–$3,500 CAD plus 13% HST).
If you are planning to install a Level 2 EV charger (typically 30–50 amps) AND your existing panel is 100 amps → Then you must upgrade to 200 amps. Most 100-amp services in the GTA and Ottawa Valley cannot sustain the simultaneous load of a heat pump, electric range, and an EV charger.
If your panel has no empty spaces for new breakers AND you need to add a single circuit (like an AC unit or a dedicated receptacle) → Then consult a Master Electrician about a "sub-panel" install or a "load-shedding" device. If you are near your total load capacity, skip the sub-panel and go directly to a 200-amp service ($3,200–$4,500 CAD plus 13% HST).
If your home is in a high-demand area like Toronto or Mississauga AND you are planning a basement legal apartment conversion → Then an upgrade to 200 amps is almost always required by the ESA to support the additional kitchen, laundry, and separate climate control systems.
Licensed Master Electrician, ESA Authorized Contractor, 20+ years experience
James Kowalski holds a master electrician license and has been an ESA Authorized Contractor for over two decades. He specializes in panel upgrades, EV charger installations, and residential rewiring projects throughout Canada and the United States.
If you notice flickering lights when your furnace or dryer kicks on → Then have a professional perform a "Voltage Drop Test." If the drop exceeds 3% under load, your service entrance conductors may be undersized or corroded, necessitating a full service upgrade regardless of current panel capacity.
If your service cable overhead (the "mast") is frayed, rusted, or showing signs of water ingress → Then upgrade the service mast and meter base in conjunction with your panel. This is often a condition set by your Local Distribution Company (LDC), such as Toronto Hydro or Hydro Ottawa.
The numbers that matter: Ontario-specific thresholds and requirements
Understanding the mathematics of your electrical system is the difference between a safe home and a code violation. In Ontario, the Electrical Safety Authority (ESA) governs these standards.
1. The 80% Rule: Your panel should not be loaded beyond 80% of its rated capacity for continuous loads. If you have a 100-amp panel, you should not be pulling more than 80 amps consistently. In a modern Ontario household, a high-efficiency furnace, electric water heater, and central AC can push a 100-amp service to its breaking point.
2. Age and Reliability: Panels installed before 1975 are reaching their engineered end-of-life. Circuit breakers have a mechanical lifespan of approximately 30 to 40 years. In Ontario’s climate, condensation cycles in garages or basements can accelerate the oxidation of busbars. If more than 20% of your breakers are "double-tapped" (two wires under one screw), your panel is undersized for the current wiring density.
3. Cost Thresholds: The "50% rule" applies here. If the cost of a major repair (replacing main breakers, re-wiring damaged busbars, or adding sub-panels) exceeds 50% of the cost of a full 200-amp service replacement (averaging $3,800 CAD), you should opt for the full replacement. It provides better long-term ROI, especially when factoring in potential insurance discounts—many Ontario insurers now offer premium reductions for homes verified to have modern, non-fuse electrical systems.
4. Efficiency Incentives: While federal programs like the Canada Greener Homes Grant have evolved, specific utility-led programs in Ontario (like those managed through Enbridge or local LDCs) occasionally offer rebates for heat pump installations. Often, the eligibility criteria for these rebates require an electrical system capable of supporting the high-draw appliance, essentially mandating a panel upgrade as a "prerequisite" expense. Always check your specific region's IESO energy efficiency portals before starting work.
5. Material Inflation: Copper prices and regulatory permit fees in Ontario have risen by roughly 22% since 2022. Expect to pay between $3,200 and $4,800 for a standard residential 200-amp upgrade. This includes the ESA permit fee (approx. $150–$250) and the mandatory inspection.
What Ontario homeowners get wrong: Common misconceptions
Many homeowners are guided by outdated advice or neighbor-to-neighbor anecdotes that do not align with current ESA mandates.
Misconception 1: "I can just swap my 100-amp breaker for a 200-amp one."
Many believe you can simply change the main breaker to increase capacity. This is categorically false and dangerous. The entire service entrance, including the utility cables from the hydro transformer, the meter base, and the service mast, must be upsized to handle the increased amperage. Your local utility provider will refuse to re-connect if the gauge of the wire is not rated for 200 amps.
Misconception 2: "My home is only 1,200 square feet, I don't need 200 amps."
Square footage is irrelevant to modern load calculation. A small 1,000-square-foot home in Niagara or Southwestern Ontario with an electric vehicle, a tankless electric water heater, and a hot tub will easily exceed the load capacity of a 100-amp service. Modern loads are appliances-dependent, not floor-plan dependent.
Misconception 3: "Insurance will cover the upgrade if I find a defect."
Most insurance policies in Ontario specifically exclude "faulty workmanship" or "inherent defects" (like old, recalled panels). If you discover a hazard, you are responsible for the repair cost. Waiting for a claim often leads to a denial of coverage after a fire, leaving the homeowner in a ruinous financial position.
Misconception 4: "I need to upgrade to 400 amps for a modern house."
Unless you are building a massive estate home or operating a commercial-grade workshop, 400-amp service is overkill. 200-amp service is the "gold standard" for the vast majority of Ontario residential housing, providing sufficient headroom for even the most electrified homes, including those with multiple Level 2 EV chargers.
Misconception 5: "The permit is just a money grab."
ESA inspections are a safety audit. If you hire a contractor who suggests "skipping" the permit to save $200, stop the work immediately. Without an ESA Certificate of Inspection, your home insurance may be void, and you will face massive hurdles when selling the property, as real estate lawyers now routinely flag unpermitted electrical work.
Step-by-step action plan: What to do right now
If you are currently questioning your panel's viability, do not wait for a breaker to trip. Follow this professional workflow to resolve your uncertainty.
Perform a Visual Inventory: Open your panel cover (only the main door, do not remove the inner safety panel). Look for "Federal Pioneer" or "Zinsco" labels. Look for melted plastic or dark, charred markings on the busbar or wires. If you see these, call a licensed Master Electrician immediately.
Log Your Loads: Create a list of every high-draw appliance in your home (stove, furnace, AC, EV charger, dryer, hot tub). Check the nameplate on each to find the "Amps" or "KW" rating. If the sum of these exceeds 80 amps, you are at the limit of a 100-amp service.
Contact Your Local Distribution Company (LDC): Call the utility that serves your region (Hydro One, Toronto Hydro, Alectra, etc.). Ask them if your current service connection (the cables coming into the home) is rated for 200 amps. This is a free service, and it dictates whether you need a simple panel swap or a much more expensive "service entrance upgrade."
Solicit Three Quotes: Use GetAHomePro to find three licensed Ontario electrical contractors. Specify that you want a quote for a 200-amp service upgrade, including a new panel, mast, and grounding rod upgrades.
Demand Itemization: Ensure each quote includes the cost of the ESA permit. Never accept a "flat-fee" quote that hides the permit cost.
Verify Licensing: Every electrical contractor in Ontario must have an ECRA/ESA license number. You can verify this number on the ESA’s online contractor lookup tool. Do not hire anyone who cannot provide this license number on their business card or quote.
Schedule the Shutdown: Understand that a 200-amp upgrade requires your home to be without power for 4 to 8 hours. Plan this for a weekday when your household is empty or you can manage the outage.
Document Everything: Once the work is done, you will receive an "ESA Certificate of Inspection." Keep this in a fireproof safe with your home insurance records. It is proof of compliance and will be essential when you eventually list your home for sale.
Cost guide: The financial breakdown
The following cost ranges represent professional, code-compliant installations in Ontario for 2026. These figures include labor, materials, permit fees, and 13% HST. Regional variations exist: Northern Ontario and remote Cottage Country areas may see 10–15% higher labor costs due to travel, while GTA competition can occasionally lower material margins.
Service Item
Cost Range (CAD)
Notes
Panel Replacement (Same Amp)
$2,200 – $2,800
Includes new breaker panel and ground bonding.
100A to 200A Upgrade
$3,500 – $4,800
Includes meter base, mast, cabling, and panel.
Emergency After-Hours Fee
$300 – $600
Additional fee for weekend/night outages.
Sub-panel Installation
$1,200 – $1,800
Only if existing service has capacity.
ESA Permit & Inspection
$150 – $250
Mandatory cost in all Ontario regions.
Note: Prices assume a standard residential setup. If your hydro meter is located on an older, non-compliant wooden wall or requires a concrete core drill for new cabling, add 15% to your contingency fund.
When to get professional help
Electrical work in Ontario is strictly regulated by the Electricity Act, 1998. The rule is absolute: If the work involves the service panel, the main breaker, or any work affecting the integrity of the ground electrode system, you must hire a licensed electrical contractor.
DIY electrical work beyond simple device changes (like replacing a light switch or outlet) is not only illegal in many residential contexts if it requires an inspection, but it is also a liability nightmare. If a fire occurs and you performed your own panel upgrade, your home insurance policy will almost certainly be voided. Furthermore, utility companies will refuse to re-energize a system that hasn't been certified by an ESA inspector. A Master Electrician is the only professional authorized to perform this work. Do not risk your safety or your property value to save a few dollars on labor; the stakes are quite literally the electrical heart of your home.
The bottom line
Upgrading to a 200-amp service is an investment in your home’s future capacity and safety. If your current system is failing, undersized, or outdated, the cost of an upgrade is far less than the cost of a catastrophic electrical fire or the frustration of constant breaker trips. Use the diagnostic framework above, consult with an ESA-licensed professional, and ensure you obtain the mandatory inspection. Find your trusted local expert at GetAHomePro.co today to ensure your home meets the modern Ontario standard.