Electrical Panel Upgrades in Ogden, UT

200-amp service upgrades, hazardous panel replacement, and meter work for homes across Weber, Davis, Morgan, Box Elder, and Cache counties. Straight quotes, permits included, done to code.

  • Licensed & Insured
  • Permits Included
  • Utility Coordinated
Electrical Panel Upgrades in Ogden, UT

What is an electrical panel upgrade?

An electrical panel upgrade replaces your home’s main breaker panel, and often the meter base and service entrance with it, with new equipment sized for modern demand. In most Ogden homes that means moving from 100-amp to 200-amp service, replacing aging or hazardous panels such as Zinsco and Federal Pacific, and bringing grounding and breaker protection up to current code. Copperview Electric handles the load calculation, the city permit, coordination with Rocky Mountain Power, the installation itself, and the final inspection.

Electrician running a load calculation on an older electrical panel before an upgrade in Ogden, Utah
Capacity100A to 200A service
TimelineAbout one day on site
PermitsPulled & inspected, included
UtilityRocky Mountain Power coordinated

How do I know if my electrical panel needs to be upgraded?

The clearest signs are breakers that trip repeatedly, lights that flicker or dim when appliances start, warmth or buzzing at the panel, and running out of space for new circuits. A panel that is more than about 25 years old, still rated at 100 amps, or made by Zinsco or Federal Pacific is also a strong candidate, even if it seems to work fine day to day.

Breakers that trip repeatedlyA breaker doing its job over and over usually means the circuit, or the whole panel, is past its limit.
Flickering or dimming lightsEspecially when the furnace, dryer, or microwave kicks on. Your service may not have the capacity.
A warm or buzzing panelHeat and noise at the panel point to loose or failing connections. Have it looked at promptly.
No room for new circuitsA full panel means every new circuit, from a freezer to a hot tub, has nowhere to land.
A fuse box or 100-amp serviceCommon in Ogden homes built before the 1980s, and undersized for how households run today.
Planning an EV, hot tub, or additionLarge new loads start with a capacity check. Upgrading first avoids doing the work twice.
Meter base and service entrance work during an electrical panel upgrade in Ogden, Utah

What’s included in a Copperview panel upgrade

A panel upgrade is more than swapping a box on the wall. Every Copperview panel upgrade includes the engineering, paperwork, and utility coordination the job actually requires:

  • Load calculation sized to how your home actually runs
  • New main breaker panel at the capacity your home needs
  • New breakers, with AFCI and GFCI protection where code requires
  • Meter base and service-entrance work when it’s needed
  • Grounding and bonding brought up to current code
  • City permit and the final inspection
  • Rocky Mountain Power disconnect and reconnect scheduling
  • Every circuit tested and clearly labeled before we leave

How our panel upgrade process works

STEP 01

Assess & load calc

We inspect your existing panel, meter, and grounding, then run a load calculation for your home’s real demand.

STEP 02

Straight quote

You get one clear, itemized number that covers equipment, labor, the permit, and the inspection. No surprise line items.

STEP 03

Permit & utility

We pull the city permit and schedule the power disconnect and reconnect with Rocky Mountain Power.

STEP 04

Install day

Power goes off, the old equipment comes out, and the new panel goes in. Most homes are re-energized the same day.

STEP 05

Inspect & walk through

The city inspects the work, we label every circuit, walk you through the new panel, and leave the space clean.

Is upgrading from 100 amps to 200 amps worth it?

For most Ogden homes, yes. 100-amp service was the standard when many Weber County neighborhoods were built, and it fills up fast once you add the loads a modern household actually runs. A 200-amp panel costs more up front, but it removes the ceiling instead of bumping against it appliance after appliance.

100-amp service200-amp service
Everyday household loadsHandles lighting, plugs, and a few large appliancesRuns a full modern household with room to spare
EV chargingOften requires an upgrade firstA dedicated 240V Level 2 circuit fits comfortably
Hot tub or saunaFrequently at or past the limitA 50A GFCI spa circuit fits without juggling loads
Kitchen remodel or additionNew circuits may have nowhere to landHeadroom for new circuits as your home grows
Home inspectionsOlder, undersized panels are commonly flaggedModern equipment that passes without drama
Inside of an older residential electrical panel opened for inspection in Ogden, Utah

Are Zinsco and Federal Pacific panels dangerous?

Zinsco and Federal Pacific (FPE) panels are widely flagged by home inspectors and insurers because their breakers can fail to trip during a fault, which is the one job a breaker exists to do. Neither brand has been installed in decades, but both are still common in Ogden-area homes built from midcentury through the 1980s.

If your panel carries either name, it is worth a professional look even if nothing seems wrong. We inspect the panel, tell you honestly whether it needs replacement or can wait, and if it does need to go, we replace it with modern, properly rated equipment in a single visit.

Have yours looked at

How much does a panel upgrade cost in Ogden?

Across Utah, upgrading from 100-amp to 200-amp service most commonly lands in the $1,500 to $3,000 range, and jobs that need mast, meter-base, or code-correction work can run higher. Every home is different, so we quote from your actual panel, not a one-size-fits-all price sheet.

What moves the number

Amperage & equipmentPanel capacity and the breakers your circuits need, including AFCI and GFCI protection.
Meter & mast conditionIf the meter base or service mast needs replacement, the scope grows.
Code correctionsGrounding, bonding, and clearance fixes that inspectors require on older installs.
RelocationMoving the panel to a new spot costs more than replacing it in place.

Your quote is itemized before any work starts, and the permit and inspection are part of it, never an add-on.

Licensed, insured, and inspected, on every panel

Panel work is service-entrance work, and Utah requires a licensed electrical contractor for good reason: mistakes at the panel affect every circuit in the house. Copperview Electric is licensed and insured, pulls a permit for every upgrade, builds to the National Electrical Code as adopted in Utah, and hands the work to the city inspector when it’s done.

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LicenseUT 13884302-5501 (DOPL)
InsuranceCarried on every job
PermitsPulled and inspected, every panel
CodeNEC as adopted in Utah

Panel upgrades across Weber, Davis, Morgan, Box Elder & Cache counties

We upgrade panels from our home base in Ogden across the Wasatch Front north corridor, where 100-amp service and older equipment are still common in established neighborhoods.

Panel upgrade questions, answered

How long does an electrical panel upgrade take?

Most residential panel upgrades are completed in about one day on site. Power is off for part of that day while the old equipment comes out and the new panel goes in. Jobs that include mast or meter-base replacement can take longer, and we tell you the expected window before work starts.

Do I need a permit for a panel upgrade in Ogden?

Yes. Panel and service work requires a permit and a final inspection in Ogden and the surrounding cities. We pull the permit, schedule the inspection, and include both in your quote, so there is nothing for you to chase.

Will my power be off during the upgrade?

Yes, for part of the install day. We coordinate the disconnect and reconnect with Rocky Mountain Power to keep the outage window as short as possible, and we let you know the plan in advance so you can prepare.

Can you replace an old fuse box with a breaker panel?

Yes. Fuse boxes still show up in older Ogden and Weber County homes, and we replace them with modern breaker panels, bringing the grounding and protection up to current code at the same time.

Do I need a panel upgrade to install an EV charger?

Not always. It depends on your panel’s capacity and what else your home runs, which is exactly what a load calculation answers. If an upgrade is needed, doing the panel and the EV charger together usually means one permit and one visit instead of two.

What’s the difference between a panel upgrade and a subpanel?

A panel upgrade increases the total capacity coming into your home at the service. A subpanel distributes capacity you already have to another location, like a garage, shop, or basement. If your main service is already at its limit, a subpanel alone won’t fix it, and we’ll tell you honestly which one your project actually needs.

Will a new panel matter when I sell my home?

It often comes up. Home inspectors routinely flag fuse boxes, undersized service, and Zinsco or Federal Pacific equipment, which can stall a sale or become a negotiation point. A modern, permitted panel takes that issue off the table.

Let’s get it wired right.

Call for a straight quote, or send a few details and we’ll get back to you the same day.

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