Electric Panel Upgrade Authority
The Electrical Systems Provider Network at electricpanelupgradeauthority.com organizes verified contractor providers, technical reference pages, and regulatory context for residential and commercial electrical panel work across the United States. This page describes how the provider network is structured, what criteria govern its content, and how individual providers relate to the broader reference material available through this resource. Understanding the provider network's scope helps users match their specific project type — ranging from a standard 200-amp service upgrade to a three-phase commercial installation — to the appropriate providers and technical context.
Electrical panel upgrades sit at the intersection of National Electrical Code (NEC) compliance, local permit authority, and utility coordination. The NEC, published by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) and adopted in whole or in part by 49 US states, establishes baseline requirements for service entrance equipment, overcurrent protection, grounding, and bonding. Local amendments, applied by county or municipal authorities having jurisdiction (AHJs), frequently impose requirements that exceed the base NEC cycle in effect for that jurisdiction. The provider network exists to help property owners, facility managers, and electrical contractors navigate this layered regulatory environment by connecting them to both licensed professionals and technical context on permit requirements, panel sizing, and code compliance.
How the provider network is maintained
Provider Network providers are reviewed against a defined set of criteria tied to verifiable, public-record license status. The criteria governing contractor inclusion require that each verified entity hold an active electrical contractor license issued by the relevant state licensing board at the time of provider. License verification is cross-referenced against state licensing databases, which are publicly accessible through agencies such as the California Contractors State License Board, the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, and equivalent bodies in other states.
Providers are reviewed on a recurring cycle. Any provider flagged for license lapse, unresolved disciplinary action recorded in a state board's public database, or documented service area misrepresentation is removed or suspended pending resolution. The provider network does not accept payment in exchange for elevated placement within a geographic or specialty category — ranking within a given search result reflects license status, documented service area, and specialty classification only.
Specialty classifications within the network follow a structured taxonomy:
- Residential service upgrades — projects involving single-family or multi-family dwellings, typically 100-amp to 400-amp services
- Commercial panel upgrades — projects in occupancies governed by commercial construction codes, including three-phase service installations
- Specialty installations — work tied to specific load types, including EV charger panel upgrade requirements, solar panel integration, and whole-home generator connections
- Legacy system remediation — replacement of identified hazardous equipment, including Federal Pacific Stab-Lok and Zinsco panels documented in CPSC recall and safety advisory records
- Emergency services — contractors verified to offer expedited response for emergency panel upgrade scenarios such as fire damage, utility disconnection orders, or failed inspection findings
What the provider network does not cover
The provider network is scoped exclusively to electrical panel and service entrance work. It does not list general electrical contractors whose primary work is branch circuit wiring, lighting, or low-voltage systems unless those contractors also hold documented specialization in service entrance or distribution panel work.
The provider network does not cover:
The provider network also does not function as a permit-pulling service or a code interpretation resource. Permit requirements vary at the AHJ level — a project in one county may require a homeowner permit, while the adjacent jurisdiction requires a licensed contractor pull. The permit requirements by state reference page addresses this variation in detail, but that content is reference material, not regulatory guidance.
Relationship to other network resources
The provider network providers connect directly to a library of technical reference pages that provide context for project scoping and contractor selection. A property owner evaluating whether a panel requires replacement can consult signs your panel needs upgrading before engaging a contractor. A facility manager comparing equipment options can reference the electrical panel brands comparison or the main breaker vs. main lug panels analysis before specifying work scope.
Cost reference material — including the electrical panel upgrade cost breakdown and rebates and incentives information — is structured to inform project budgeting without functioning as a quote or estimate. Figures cited in those pages reflect published utility program data, DOE datasets, and contractor association surveys, with source attribution at the point of use.
How to interpret providers
Each provider network provider displays: licensed contractor name, state of licensure, license number, primary service area (defined at the county level for most states), and applicable specialty classifications from the taxonomy above. A provider under "residential service upgrades" in a given state does not imply the contractor is qualified or licensed for commercial three-phase work — those are separate classification categories verified independently.
Providers do not include customer reviews, star ratings, or testimonial content. This is a deliberate structural decision: the provider network's function is license verification and scope classification, not reputation scoring. Users seeking review data should consult the contractor's record on state licensing board complaint databases, which are public record.
The panel upgrade inspection checklist and finding a licensed electrician for panel upgrade pages provide structured frameworks for evaluating contractor proposals and understanding the inspection process that follows permitted work — both are reference resources independent of any specific provider.
This site is part of the Trade Services Authority network.