Amperage determines what your home can supportMost Houston homes have 100-amp or 150-amp service panels. Modern homes with electric vehicles, heat pumps, and large appliances typically require 200-amp service. A 100-to-200 amp upgrade costs $1,400–$2,565 in Houston. Adding a 400-amp panel for larger homes or commercial-style loads costs $3,135–$5,200. Define what you need the panel to support before getting quotes — the amperage tier drives the price significantly.
Utility coordination adds time and costPanel upgrades often require the utility company to temporarily disconnect service to the meter, and may require upgrading the meter base or service entrance cable. Utility coordination fees and work typically add $300–$800 and 1–3 weeks of scheduling lead time. Confirm your contractor includes utility coordination in their scope — panels that require utility involvement but don't account for it will have surprise cost additions mid-project.
Permit and inspection is legally required — not optionalElectrical panel replacement requires a permit and inspection from your local building department in Houston in every jurisdiction without exception. This protects your home's insurability and ensures the work meets code. Any electrician who offers to skip the permit to save money is putting your home insurance at risk and leaving you with no legal recourse. Inspections typically add 1–5 days to the project timeline.
Panel brand and breaker quality matters for 30+ yearsYour electrical panel will likely be in place for 30–50 years. Quality panel brands (Square D, Siemens, Eaton) have reliable breakers and are widely supported for future additions. Cheaper or discontinued brands (Federal Pacific, Zinsco) are known fire hazards and should be replaced. Confirm the brand your electrician is quoting — asking this question is a quick quality check for any electrician.
EV charger and solar prep while the panel is openIf you're upgrading your panel, adding capacity for an EV charger (50-amp circuit) or solar system interconnection while the electrician is already there adds $228–$570 versus $855–$1,425 as a standalone future project. Even if you don't own an EV yet, roughing in conduit during the panel upgrade is a low-cost future-proofing decision worth discussing with your electrician.
Older home wiring may require additional workHomes in Houston built before 1980 may have aluminium branch circuit wiring or knob-and-tube wiring — both of which require specific remediation when a panel is upgraded. Your electrician should inspect the existing wiring type before quoting and disclose if additional work (anti-oxidant paste on aluminium connections, or CO/ALR devices) is needed. Discovering this mid-project is one of the most common causes of panel upgrade budget overruns.