Electrical panel replacement cost in WNY
Here is exactly what you will pay to replace an electrical panel in Western New York — and why the quote you got might be twice what your neighbor paid for what sounds like the same job.
Key takeaways
- - A standard 200-amp panel replacement in WNY costs $2,000–$4,500 including labor, materials, permit, and inspection.
- - The biggest cost swings come from scope differences: meter socket, riser, panel brand, and basement vs. exterior access.
- - Permit fees range from $50–$200 by municipality. Skipping the permit costs more in the long run.
- - Homes with Zinsco or Federal Pacific panels should budget at the higher end and treat replacement as urgent.
What is actually in the price
When an electrician quotes a panel replacement, the number is a bundle of at least six line items. Understanding what is in and what is out is the only way to compare quotes fairly.
Panel + breakers
$400–$900
Square D Homeline at the low end, QO or Eaton BR at the high end. Includes main breaker and branch breakers to match your existing circuits.
Labor
$1,200–$2,400
WNY licensed electrician rates typically run $85–$125/hr. A clean swap takes 6–10 hours; add time for tight basements or panel relocation.
Permit + inspection
$50–$200
Required in every Erie and Niagara county municipality. Fee varies by town. Inspection usually within one week.
Meter socket
$300–$800
Not always needed. Required if upgrading from 100A to 200A service or if the existing socket is damaged or outdated.
Utility disconnect/reconnect
$0–$200
NYSEG and National Grid handle this differently. Some jobs require a scheduled utility visit; others allow the electrician to pull the meter under their own authority.
Riser + weatherhead
$300–$700
Needed when the service entrance cable or mast does not meet current code. Common in pre-1970 homes.
Why quotes vary so wildly
Two contractors can look at the same panel and come back with quotes $2,000 apart. That does not necessarily mean one is ripping you off. It usually means they are quoting different scope.
Common scope differences between quotes
| Category | Lower quote | Higher quote |
|---|---|---|
| Meter socket | Reuses existing socket | Replaces socket (required for 200A upgrade) |
| Panel brand | Budget panel (Homeline, Murray) | Commercial-grade (QO, Eaton BR, Siemens) |
| Riser / weatherhead | Not included — assumes existing is fine | Included — brings service entrance to current code |
| Grounding | Reuses existing ground rod | Adds second ground rod + new bonding (code compliant) |
| Permit | Not mentioned or homeowner-pulled | Contractor pulls and includes fee |
| Cleanup + drywall | Not included | Patches and paints around new panel location |
Myth
The cheapest panel quote is the best deal.
Reality
The cheapest quote usually has the narrowest scope. A $1,800 quote that skips the meter socket means you pay another $800 when the inspector flags it — plus a second utility visit. Compare line items, not bottom lines.
Why WNY pricing is different
- NYSEG and National Grid have different disconnect/reconnect procedures and scheduling backlogs — this affects labor time and project timeline.
- Erie County permit fees differ from Niagara County, and individual towns (Amherst, Cheektowaga, Tonawanda) set their own schedules.
- Buffalo-area housing stock from the 1950s–1970s has a higher-than-average rate of Zinsco and Federal Pacific panels, which require more careful removal and often reveal knob-and-tube or aluminum branch wiring that adds scope.
- WNY electrician labor rates ($85–$125/hr) sit below NYC metro rates but above rural upstate rates. National cost calculators often miss this middle ground.
Hidden costs contractors sometimes skip mentioning
Watch for these
- No permit included in the quote — you discover the fee and inspection delay after signing.
- Meter socket excluded — the inspector requires it, triggering a change order.
- Grounding not addressed — a second ground rod and bonding jumper are code requirements many older homes lack.
- No mention of utility coordination — NYSEG or National Grid scheduling can add 1–3 weeks if not planned for.
- Drywall and paint not included — the old panel leaves a hole or exposed framing behind the new one.
Financing and rebate context
A panel replacement by itself is not directly covered by most energy rebate programs. However, when the panel replacement is part of a broader electrification project — solar, heat pump, EV charger — the economics change:
- Federal tax credit (25C). If the panel upgrade is done as part of a qualified electrification project, a portion may be eligible for the 30% credit up to $600 for the panel and up to $150 for the home energy audit. Your tax advisor has the final say.
- NYSERDA programs. Some NYSERDA-administered programs cover electrical upgrades when bundled with heat pump or weatherization work. Eligibility depends on income and scope.
- Bundling saves labor. If you are planning solar within the next 12 months, doing the panel replacement at the same time can save $500–$1,000 in duplicated labor and a second utility disconnect.
What to do next
- 1
Check if your panel needs replacing
The Panel Upgrade Checker tells you whether your current panel can handle your planned projects or whether you need to upgrade first.
- 2
Understand the sequencing
Read Why Solar Quotes Vary to learn how panel scope hides inside solar proposals — and how to catch it before signing.
- 3
Get your full action plan
The Home Power Plan sequences panel, solar, battery, and EV charger projects around your actual house and utility.
FAQ
FAQ
What does an electrical panel replacement cost in Western New York?
Most full panel replacements in WNY run between $2,000 and $4,500 for a standard 200-amp swap, including labor, the panel itself, breakers, permit, and inspection. If the meter socket needs replacing or the utility requires a riser upgrade, add $500–$1,500. Homes with Zinsco or Federal Pacific panels often fall at the higher end because the electrician has to deal with obsolete bus bars and non-standard breakers.
Why do electrical panel quotes vary so much?
Three reasons. First, scope: some quotes include a meter socket replacement and others do not. Second, panel brand: a Square D Homeline costs less than a QO or Eaton BR, and some electricians mark up equipment more than others. Third, labor conditions: a panel in a finished basement with tight clearance takes longer than one on an exterior wall with open access. Always compare quotes on identical scope before comparing price.
Does my homeowner's insurance cover panel replacement?
Standard homeowner's policies do not cover panel replacement as a maintenance item. However, if a panel failure causes a covered loss (fire, surge damage), the insurance may cover replacement as part of the claim. Some insurers require or incentivize upgrades from Zinsco or Federal Pacific panels to maintain coverage — ask your agent if your current panel affects your policy.
How long does a panel replacement take?
A straightforward swap — same location, no meter socket work, no riser — typically takes a licensed electrician 6–10 hours in a single day. If the utility needs to disconnect and reconnect service, add a scheduling delay of 1–3 weeks depending on NYSEG or National Grid backlog. Permit inspections in Erie County usually happen within a week of requesting them.
Do I need a permit to replace an electrical panel in WNY?
Yes. Every municipality in Erie and Niagara counties requires an electrical permit for panel replacement. The permit triggers an inspection that confirms the work meets current code. Permit fees range from $50 to $200 depending on the municipality. Skipping the permit saves a small fee now but can create large problems later: failed home inspections at sale, insurance claim denials, and code violations that require rework.
Should I replace my panel before adding solar?
It depends on your panel's age, brand, and available capacity. If you have a 100-amp panel, a Zinsco/FPE panel, or fewer than 4 open breaker slots, replacing the panel first almost always saves money compared to doing solar first and then discovering you need a panel upgrade mid-project. Use the Panel Upgrade Checker to find out where you stand before calling a solar installer.