Moving an electrical panel to a different wall is one of the higher-scope electrical projects a homeowner can commission — not because it is technically difficult, but because it involves the utility service drop, the ESA permit, coordinated re-routing of every branch circuit, and often a full panel replacement in the same visit. In an Ontario home, moving the panel is a real option in specific renovation scenarios but a poor idea in others. This guide walks GTA homeowners through when moving an electrical panel makes sense, what the Ontario Electrical Safety Code and utility rules require, and what to expect on cost and timeline.
Direct answer: yes, an electrical panel can be moved to a different wall in an Ontario home. The work requires an ESA permit, utility coordination for a service disconnect and reconnect, a licensed electrical contractor, and typically full re-termination of every branch circuit at the new location. In the GTA, expect $3,500-8,500 depending on the distance moved and whether the service entrance itself has to be re-routed.
Our post on subpanels covers the alternative to a full panel relocation when the goal is more capacity or better location for new loads.
Direct answer: moving the panel a short distance on the same interior wall is much less expensive than relocating to a wall on the opposite side of the house. The difference is whether the utility service entrance conductors (the cable from the meter to the panel) have to be extended, re-routed, or replaced entirely.
Direct answer: Toronto Hydro, Alectra, Hydro One, or your local LDC schedules a service disconnect for the day of the work and reconnects after ESA release. If the meter needs to move, the utility handles the meter re-mount on their side of the service. Coordination adds 5-15 business days to the timeline.
Our post on whether a permit is required covers the ESA and utility flow in more detail. The permit for a panel relocation is functionally the same as for a service upgrade.
Direct answer: every branch circuit currently landing on the old panel has to reach the new panel. Short moves usually just require extending the cables through a junction box at the old panel location. Longer moves may require replacing whole cable runs or running new cable through unfinished areas.
Section 12 of the Ontario Electrical Safety Code requires that junctions remain accessible and that cable runs meet the support rules. Splices buried behind drywall are a code violation. If a branch circuit cannot be extended cleanly, the whole run gets replaced.
Direct answer: if you are already paying for utility disconnect, ESA permit, and full panel re-termination, upgrading to 200-amp service adds a marginal cost — usually $800-1,500 on top of the relocation. Skipping the upgrade means paying for another utility disconnect five years from now when you add an EV charger or a heat pump.
Our post on whether you need a panel upgrade covers the load calc that decides whether 200 amp is right for your home.
In our experience relocating panels across GTA renovations, the single detail that determines whether the project is smooth or painful is the wall stud and structural review at the new location. A panel needs solid wood or masonry backing, clearance for the cable entries, proper access from the front and top, and the correct utility routing to the meter. Homeowners who commit to a new panel location without a licensed electrician review sometimes discover on install day that the wall cannot support the cable-entry angles or that the utility service drop cannot cleanly reach the meter. Fifteen minutes of walk-through beforehand prevents the mid-project scope change every time. The Electrical Safety Authority also expects clearance compliance to be settled before the permit inspection stage — catching it upfront saves a redo.
Planning to relocate your electrical panel during a GTA renovation? Book an ESA-certified electrician to quote the move and coordinate the utility service. Call us at 416-838-9006 or visit our contact page — we will get back to you the same day.
Electrician Since 2008 Journeyman Electrician Designated Master Electrician at EZSMART Corp