An electrical panel upgrade is one of those home projects that homeowners put off precisely because they cannot picture the price. The number floats somewhere between “a few hundred dollars” and “terrifying,” and that uncertainty is enough to keep a lot of people running an undersized panel long past the point where they should have replaced it. So let us take the mystery out of it.


For most homes in the Tulsa area, a service panel upgrade lands between two thousand and five thousand dollars. The spread is wide because the cost depends on real variables, not on how the day is going for the contractor. Here is what actually drives the figure.


The amp service you are moving to

The most common upgrade takes a home from 60 or 100 amp service to 200 amp service. That jump is what gives a modern household room for central air, electric appliances, a home office, and EV charging without constantly tripping breakers. A larger home with two HVAC systems or a workshop may need more, and the size of the new service is the single biggest line item in the estimate.


What else has to be replaced

A panel rarely lives in isolation. Sometimes the meter base and the weatherhead, the point where the utility line enters the house, are old enough that they have to be replaced at the same time. If the existing branch circuits do not meet current code, bringing them up to standard adds to the job. None of this is padding. It is the difference between swapping a box on the wall and properly modernizing the home’s service entrance.


Permits and inspection

Tulsa County requires a permit for panel work, and the local authority inspects the installation before the utility reconnects power. Permit and inspection fees add a few hundred dollars, and they are not the place to cut corners. A permitted, inspected panel is what protects your insurance coverage and keeps the work from becoming a problem during a future home sale. A contractor offering to skip the permit is offering you a future headache at a small discount.


Why the cheapest quote is rarely the real one

A firm number should come after a site visit and a load calculation, not over the phone. Be cautious of any quote that arrives without one, because it almost always means a conversation later about everything that was not included. A careful contractor walks the home, measures the actual load, and gives you an estimate in writing that reflects what your house actually needs.


The work itself usually means a half day to a full day without power while the crew moves the service from the old panel to the new one. That is normal. Planning the job for a mild-weather week rather than the middle of a heat wave just makes the day more comfortable.


Getting a straight answer

Panel upgrades should always go to a licensed electrical contractor. Ask for the Oklahoma Electrical Contractor License number, verify it through the Construction Industries Board, and make sure the estimate is in writing before any work starts. Those three steps filter out most of the operators you would not want touching your service panel anyway.


In the Tulsa area, Half Moon Electric performs panel upgrades under Oklahoma Electrical Contractor License #00140295, starting with a load calculation and a written estimate so the price is clear before the work begins. The company is part of Half Moon Plumbing and Electric, a back-to-back Tulsa World “Best in the World” winner for plumbing and water treatment in 2024 and 2025, and homeowners weighing the project can review what panel work involves with Half Moon Electric before deciding. A planned upgrade is almost always cheaper than the emergency replacement that follows a failure.


The bottom line

Budget two to five thousand for a typical Tulsa-area panel upgrade, expect the final number to depend on amp service and what else needs replacing, and insist on a written estimate after a real load calculation. With those expectations set, the project stops being a vague worry and becomes a straightforward decision.