A homeowner in Laurel Hill called us a few summers back. The kitchen lights had been flickering for months whenever the AC kicked on. The microwave breaker tripped if the toaster was running. The dryer outlet worked fine — except on Sunday laundry days when the whole second floor seemed to dim slightly. They'd been telling themselves these were unrelated quirks of an older house. The home inspector at purchase had labeled the panel "operational." Nothing felt urgent.
It wasn't unrelated. It wasn't operational. The 100-amp panel installed in 1986 was carrying load it was never designed to handle — central air, electric range, electric dryer, two refrigerators, and a home office full of equipment. The panel wasn't failing dramatically. It was running at 95% of its rated capacity for hours a day and had been for years. The breakers were warm to the touch. The bus bar showed visible discoloration when we pulled the cover. The previous owner had stab-locked breakers from a brand recalled in the 1990s.
We did a load calculation, walked the homeowner through the numbers, and recommended a 200-amp service upgrade. Seven days later it was installed, permitted, inspected, and signed off. The flickering stopped that afternoon.
That call is the panel work Lous Electric Service runs across Laurel Hill, NC every week. Not glamorous. Not dramatic. Just necessary work that doesn't get cheaper by waiting and gets dangerous if it's ignored long enough.
We don't pitch panel upgrades that homes don't need. We do recommend them when the math says the existing panel is the constraint. Here's what the truck rolls out for.
The most common upgrade in Laurel Hill, NC, and for clear reasons. A 100-amp service that was sized for a 1985 home is overwhelmed by 2025 loads — EV chargers, central air, induction ranges, electric water heaters, heat pump conversions. The 200 amp service upgrade replaces the meter base, the service entrance conductors, the main breaker, and the panel cabinet itself. Permitted, inspected, and coordinated with the local utility for the disconnect window. Most jobs complete in a single day plus inspection turnaround.
When the existing main electrical panel has reached end-of-life — corroded bus bars, melted breaker contacts, rust through the cabinet — replacement is the only honest answer. We swap the cabinet, transfer or replace circuit conductors as required, install new breakers matched to existing circuits, and torque-spec verify every connection to manufacturer requirements. You get a labeled circuit directory mapped during the work, not estimated afterward.
If your panel cover reads Federal Pacific Stab-Lok or Zinsco, this is a conversation we need to have. Both manufacturers had documented breaker failure issues — meaning the breaker can fail to trip during a fault, allowing fault current to pass through to the circuit indefinitely. That's the precondition for an electrical fire. Insurance carriers in Laurel Hill, NC increasingly refuse to renew policies on homes with these panels still installed. Replacement isn't optional once they're identified.
A finished basement gym, a detached workshop, a converted garage, an in-law suite. These additions often outpace the main panel's available breaker space. A properly sized sub-panel — fed from the main with appropriate feeder cable, grounded per code at the new location, equipped with its own breaker schedule — solves the problem cleanly. Common installs in Laurel Hill: 60-amp sub-panels for workshops, 100-amp sub-panels for full additions.
The service entrance is the conductor running from the utility connection to your meter to your main panel. It's also the most weather-exposed part of your residential electrical system. UV damage, ice damage, corrosion at the weatherhead. Service entrance work requires utility coordination — the line is de-energized for the work — and is permitted and inspected. Repair is faster than full replacement; we recommend the right one based on what we find.
Not every panel issue requires a full panel replacement. A breaker tripping under nominal load may have failed internally. A breaker that won't reset may have detected a real fault. Our diagnostic identifies which scenario applies and prices the actual fix instead of the worst-case fix. We're not in the business of selling panel upgrades to homes that need a $90 breaker swap.
Commercial properties in Laurel Hill, NC often run on three-phase service for HVAC, motor loads, and high-demand applications. We install three-phase main panels and sub-panels, coordinate with the utility for service activation, integrate sub-meters where landlords require tenant-level metering. Permits, inspection, and as-built documentation are standard scope.
This is the section most contractors skip because the breakdown makes margin transparent. We're including it because honest pricing is the only kind worth quoting.
A 200-amp panel upgrade in Laurel Hill breaks into roughly five cost categories.
The total range for most residential 200-amp upgrades in Laurel Hill falls within a predictable band. We give you the exact number after the load calculation and panel inspection. No mystery markups, no "additional fees" added at the end.
Scenario one: the EV trigger. Homeowner orders a Level 2 EV charger. Installer says the existing 100-amp panel can't support it without an upgrade. We do the load calculation, confirm, quote a 200-amp upgrade, and install. EV charger goes in two weeks later.
Scenario two: the insurance ultimatum. Carrier flags a Federal Pacific or Zinsco panel during a routine policy review and gives the homeowner a window to replace or lose coverage. We handle the replacement, provide documentation that satisfies the carrier, and the policy renews on schedule.
Scenario three: the renovation reality check. Homeowner is planning a kitchen remodel with new induction range, new electric oven, new dishwasher, and the contractor's electrician points out the existing panel can't handle the new load. We size the upgrade to the renovation scope and time it before the kitchen work begins.
Scenario four: the slow decline. Lights flicker. Breakers trip under combined loads. The dryer outlet feels warm. The homeowner calls because something feels off but can't put a finger on it. We diagnose, find a panel running at the edge of its capacity with deteriorating bus bars, and walk through the replacement options.
If your situation matches any of these, the conversation starts with a load calculation in Laurel Hill, not a sales pitch.
The trucks rolling out to a panel job in Laurel Hill, NC carry torque-calibrated tools rated for service-panel terminals, infrared thermal cameras for post-energization verification, and a stocked inventory of common panel brands and breaker types — Square D Homeline and QO, Eaton BR and CH, Siemens, and Cutler-Hammer. Federal Pacific and Zinsco replacement panels are stocked because we replace them often. The full inventory is the reason panel upgrades don't require a second trip to the supply house mid-job.
The honest math on what a panel upgrade actually costs versus what it saves.
The cost is one line item. Labor, materials, permit, inspection, and utility coordination, paid once. The work runs unattended for decades after.
The savings side is where most homeowners miss the picture. A panel upgrade isn't really a cost — it's a constraint removal. The home with a maxed-out 100-amp panel can't add an EV charger, can't run a heat pump, can't accommodate a full kitchen remodel, can't handle a basement workshop. Every future improvement is gated by the panel.
The home with a 200-amp panel is unlocked. EV charging is a $1,500 install instead of a $7,000 upgrade-plus-charger. Heat pump conversion is straightforward. Kitchen remodel doesn't need to budget around a panel limitation. Basement build-out is a sub-panel away.
Look at panel upgrades through the lens of the next ten years of decisions, not the lens of today's invoice. The math changes. The home with the upgraded panel pays itself back in flexibility — every project that costs less because the panel isn't the bottleneck.
There's also a quieter savings line: the avoided cost of reactive panel replacement after a failure. A panel that's allowed to deteriorate to the point of failure forces an emergency replacement on someone else's timeline, with emergency electrician rates, with possible damage to the home's wiring upstream of the panel, and with possible insurance claim complications. Planning the upgrade now is always cheaper than reacting to it later.
If you're not sure whether your panel needs replacement, repair, or just a circuit-level fix, the right starting point is the load calculation, not the quote. Lous Electric Service performs panel diagnostics across Laurel Hill, NC on its own — we measure actual demand, inspect the panel internals, document the manufacturer and age, and tell you which scenario applies. The diagnostic is honest work. If your panel is fine, we say so and you save the money. If it isn't, you have the data to decide. Either way, the right call gets made with information instead of pressure.
Most residential upgrades in Laurel Hill complete in one full day on-site, plus an inspection window that varies with the local jurisdiction's schedule.
Yes, for the install window — typically the bulk of the work day. We coordinate with you and the utility on timing so it's predictable. Most Laurel Hill, NC homeowners use the window for errands or work elsewhere.
For Federal Pacific, Zinsco, or Sylvania replacements, most carriers in Laurel Hill require documentation and adjust coverage accordingly. We provide the permit, inspection, and installation paperwork.
Yes — and that's one of the most common reasons for upgrading. A 200-amp panel typically supports a Level 2 EV charger comfortably. We size the upgrade with future loads in mind during the load calculation in Laurel Hill, NC.
Repair addresses a specific component — a failed breaker, a damaged conductor, a corroded lug — while leaving the panel cabinet and bus in place. Replacement swaps the entire panel. The right choice depends on the panel's age, condition, and remaining service life.