Finishing a basement in a GTA home, adding storage in the utility room, or installing a laundry sink against the same wall as the electrical panel — all of these run into the same code question. How much space must stay clear in front of the panel? The Ontario Electrical Safety Code has explicit numbers, and inspectors enforce them strictly. This guide walks Ontario homeowners through the clearance requirement in front of an electrical panel, why it exists, and how to plan renovations around it.
Direct answer: Rule 2-308 of the Ontario Electrical Safety Code requires a clear working space in front of the panel measuring at least 1 metre deep, 750 mm wide (or the panel width, whichever is greater), and extending from the floor to at least 2 metres above the floor. The panel door must be able to open at least 90 degrees.
Direct answer: the working space rule exists to protect the electrician (or you) during any panel access — resetting a breaker, checking a smell, replacing a device, or opening the trim. Without adequate clearance, the operator cannot back away safely if an arc flash occurs, and cannot manoeuvre tools and PPE for hands-on work.
The Electrical Safety Authority lists inadequate working space as one of the recurring writeups on residential permit inspections in the GTA — often flagged during finished-basement, laundry-room, or utility-room permit work. Blocked panels do not just fail inspection; they make future service calls dangerous.
Direct answer: the wall behind the panel is usually a stud bay and is not affected by the clearance rule. What matters is what goes on the wall around the panel — conduit, cable trays, and other electrical equipment that shares the panel’s serviceable area are allowed. Non-electrical clutter, decorations, and finishes should not intrude into the working space.
Rule 2-320 covers the clearance requirements for the working space more precisely, including exceptions for panels installed in closets (generally not permitted for residential unless the closet is dedicated electrical).
Direct answer: temporary storage boxes are technically not permitted in the working space but are usually tolerated as long as the panel remains readily accessible. Permanent installations of any kind — shelving, appliances, drywall closets — are strictly enforced.
Panels installed at a slight angle (front face not parallel to the wall) still require the same clearance measured from the panel face, not from the wall behind it. That catches some homeowners off guard on older installations.
In our experience across GTA basement finishes, the single detail that saves customers from a costly framing redo is confirming the clearance with the electrician before drywall goes up. We routinely walk basement projects and mark the working-space box on the subfloor with masking tape. Homeowners who assumed “the panel is small, I only need a foot or two” are surprised at how much room a full 1-metre depth actually takes up in a finished basement. Half an hour of tape work before the drywallers arrive is the cheapest inspection insurance available. Our post on panel upgrade timing covers when a basement finish is the right moment to also upgrade.
Planning a basement or utility-room renovation in the GTA and want an ESA-certified electrician to confirm panel working-space clearance before framing? 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