A well-labeled breaker box is one of the highest-value five-minute upgrades a homeowner can do. It saves emergency responders’ time, saves an electrician’s diagnostic hour, and saves you from flipping every breaker to find the sump pump during a wet spring. This guide walks GTA homeowners through how to label a breaker box accurately, what the Ontario Electrical Safety Code asks for, and how to make labels that survive twenty years in a basement.
Direct answer: Rule 26-618 of the Ontario Electrical Safety Code requires every breaker in a residential panel to be identified as to the circuit or equipment it controls. “General purpose” or “outlets” is not enough on any modern install — the label must be specific enough that someone can identify the circuit without turning it on and off.
Older installs are grandfathered in most cases, but any panel upgrade, service change, or major renovation triggers the labelling requirement for the affected circuits. If you are replacing a panel, all circuits get relabeled at that time.
Direct answer: you cannot label accurately until you have mapped the panel. Mapping is the process of walking the house and identifying which breaker feeds each outlet, fixture, or appliance. Our post on how to map an electrical panel covers the full procedure.
If you skip the mapping step and just relabel from your best guess, you end up with a schedule that is wrong in three or four places. Wrong labels are worse than no labels because they invite dangerous assumptions.
Direct answer: three options in order of durability — (1) the printed panel schedule sticker included with the panel, filled in with a fine-point permanent marker, (2) a printed spreadsheet or table taped inside the panel door with clear tape or a plastic sleeve, or (3) an aluminum engraved label plate for each breaker (higher-end but very durable).
Direct answer: labels go on the inside of the panel door where they cannot be knocked off but can be read when the door is open. Do not put labels on individual breaker faces — they can interfere with breaker operation and inspectors sometimes flag them.
Some homeowners also keep a laminated copy in a document folder in the kitchen or a shared cloud folder. Useful for tenants, house-sitters, and remote service scheduling.
Direct answer: take a clear phone photograph of the finished panel schedule and store it in a shared family folder or a cloud document. This copy survives basement flooding, house fires, and roll-of-tape adhesive failures. Every electrician on future service calls will thank you for having it.
Update the photo whenever you add, remove, or change a breaker. This is a 30-second step and turns your panel schedule into a maintenance-tracked living document.
The Electrical Safety Authority lists unlabeled and mis-labeled panels among common residential inspection findings in its Ontario Electrical Safety Report. Getting this right is one of the cheapest quality-of-life upgrades in home ownership.
In our experience relabelling panels across the GTA — usually during panel upgrades or move-in service calls — the single trick that makes labels last is a printed template inside a plastic sleeve. Handwritten labels in basement humidity blur, fade, or peel within a few years. A printed sheet in a clear sleeve stays legible for the life of the panel and can be reprinted in five minutes when a circuit changes. Homeowners who invest in the template today rarely call us for relabelling later; homeowners who use pencil-on-cardboard usually book a relabel visit every 5-7 years. Our post on panel mapping covers the walkthrough that produces the source data for the template.
Want an ESA-certified electrician to map, label, and photograph your GTA home’s panel accurately in one visit? 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