Turning off the main power to your house is one of the few electrical procedures every Ontario homeowner should know cold — before a flooding basement, a small fire, or a service tech arriving to work on the water heater. Getting to a dead panel in ten seconds is the difference between a wet floor and a real emergency. This guide walks GTA homeowners through how to safely turn off main power to the house, what to expect afterward, and when the utility — not you — has to be the one to disconnect.
Direct answer: in almost every Ontario residential home, the main disconnect is the large horizontally-oriented double-pole breaker at the very top of your main electrical panel. It is labelled with the panel’s amperage rating (100, 125, or 200) and is usually the widest breaker in the box. Flipping it down cuts power to every branch circuit at once.
In a small number of GTA homes, the main disconnect is a separate switch outside the panel — in the meter enclosure at the exterior wall, or in a service disconnect box next to the meter. If your main panel does not have a large breaker at the top, look for a separate disconnect enclosure near the meter.
Direct answer: everything on the load side of the main breaker (every branch circuit in the house) is dead. Everything on the line side of the main breaker — the main lugs, the service entrance conductors, the meter socket, and the utility drop — stays live until the utility physically disconnects the drop or pulls the meter.
This is why panel work requires the utility to pull the meter, not just the homeowner to flip the main. Section 6-200 of the Ontario Electrical Safety Code covers the main service disconnect. Our post on main breaker vs main lug panels covers the disconnect logic in more detail.
Do not turn off the main just to “reset” a single tripping breaker — flip the specific breaker instead. Killing the whole house resets clocks, cycles the furnace or AC compressor, and can crash home network gear.
Direct answer: any work on the service entrance conductors, the meter, the main lugs, or the utility drop requires the utility to disconnect at the drop or pull the meter. Toronto Hydro, Alectra, Hydro One, and other Ontario LDCs handle these disconnects on schedule when a licensed electrical contractor requests one. Homeowners cannot arrange this directly — the request goes through the contractor’s ESA-permit filing.
The Electrical Safety Authority coordinates service-side work through the local distribution company as part of any permit involving service upgrade, panel replacement, or meter relocation.
Direct answer: flip the main breaker back up firmly and in one motion. Then walk the house and confirm major appliances have come back on. Reset clocks, restart the furnace or AC if needed, and check the sump pump.
If you killed the main because of a fault (arcing outlet, hot breaker, burning smell), do not restore power until a licensed electrician has diagnosed and cleared the cause. Bringing the main back up with the fault still active can turn a small incident into a fire.
In our experience answering emergency calls across the GTA, the single most useful piece of preparation for any homeowner is a labelled photograph of your main breaker. Take a phone picture now, in daylight, when you are calm, showing exactly where the main is and what the OFF and ON positions look like. Store it in a shared family folder. When water is spraying from a ceiling and the panel is in a dark basement, no one wants to look for the main by phone flashlight. Homeowners with the photo find the main in seconds. Our post on how to map your panel covers the broader labelling exercise — the main-breaker photo is the quickest single upgrade in that whole project.
Need an ESA-certified electrician to review your main panel, label the main disconnect, or clear a fault before you restore power in your GTA home? 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