What Size Electrical Panel Does My Home Need?

Most modern Southwest Florida homes require a minimum of 200-amp electrical service to comfortably support air conditioning systems, pool equipment, kitchen appliances, and general household demand. Larger homes in communities like Grey Oaks, Quail West, Mediterra, or Tiburon in Naples that run multiple AC systems, whole home generators, EV chargers, and extensive outdoor living equipment may require 400-amp service or a main panel and subpanel arrangement. The right answer for your home starts with a load calculation, not a guess.

Electrical Panel installed by Mabry Brothers

Understanding Electrical Service Size

The electrical service size, measured in amperes, refers to the maximum amount of electrical current that can flow from the utility into your home at any given time. Your electrical panel distributes this capacity across individual circuits throughout the home. A larger panel does not mean you use more electricity. It means you have more capacity available when it is needed. Think of it like a water main feeding your house. A larger main does not force more water through, but it can supply more when demand requires it.

Why 100-Amp Panels Are No Longer Adequate for Most Homes

100-amp service was once standard for residential construction. It was adequate when homes had fewer high-draw appliances and no central air conditioning, EV chargers, or pool equipment. Today, a 100-amp service in a typical Southwest Florida home is severely underpowered. A single 5-ton air conditioning system can draw a substantial portion of that 100-amp capacity on its own. Add a water heater, refrigerator, kitchen appliances, pool pump, and general household loads, and a 100-amp panel is operating at or near its maximum capacity at all times. This leaves no margin for new equipment and creates the conditions for frequent breaker trips and accelerated component wear.

Original 100-amp services are still common in older homes throughout Cape Coral’s original grid, Lehigh Acres, the McGregor Boulevard corridor, parts of North Fort Myers, and established neighborhoods in Bonita Springs. If your home falls into this category and you have added modern appliances or are planning to, a service evaluation should be a near-term priority.

What 200-Amp Service Covers in Southwest Florida

200-amp service is the current standard for most residential construction in Florida. It provides adequate capacity for central air conditioning, kitchen appliances, electric water heaters, pool equipment, general household circuits, and in many cases a single EV charger. Most Southwest Florida homes built after the mid-1990s in communities like Pelican Landing, Shadow Wood, Vasari, Palmira, and Copperleaf have 200-amp service. If your home is in this category and you are adding moderate new loads, a load calculation will confirm whether you have sufficient headroom.

When 400-Amp Service or a Subpanel Configuration Makes Sense

Larger and more electrically demanding properties need more than 200-amp service can provide. This is increasingly common in upscale communities throughout Collier County and Lee County. Homes in Port Royal, Aqualane Shores, Pine Ridge Estates, and similar Naples neighborhoods often feature square footage in excess of 4,000 square feet, multiple large AC systems, whole home generators, EV charging stations, extensive pool and spa equipment, and sophisticated home automation. Properties like these routinely require 400-amp service or a 200-amp main panel paired with one or more subpanels feeding specific zones of the property such as the guest house, pool house, or detached garage.

The same applies to waterfront estates on Sanibel Island and Captiva Island where renovation projects have substantially increased the electrical load beyond what the original service can safely support. Our team is experienced in designing and installing panel configurations for high-demand residential properties throughout Southwest Florida.

How a Load Calculation Determines the Right Size

The technically correct way to determine the right panel size for your home is a load calculation, an analysis of your home’s total connected electrical demand compared against available service capacity. A load calculation accounts for your air conditioning systems, heating equipment, water heater, cooking equipment, lighting, general-purpose outlets, and any specialty loads like EV chargers or pool equipment. It applies diversity factors that recognize not everything in the home runs at full load simultaneously, arriving at a realistic demand figure. Our company performs load calculations as standard practice before recommending panel size for any upgrade project, so you always know the recommendation is backed by actual numbers specific to your home.

Panel Sizing Realities Across Southwest Florida Communities

Panel sizing is not uniform across our service area. Understanding the typical situations in different communities helps set realistic expectations before we visit.

In older Fort Myers neighborhoods like Whiskey Creek, Iona, and the McGregor corridor, original 100-amp services are common and frequently need upgrading when homeowners modernize. In the established sections of Cape Coral, particularly east Cape, many homes are on 150-amp or early 200-amp services that were adequate when built but are now strained by modern demand.

In growing communities throughout Estero and Bonita Springs, including Veronawalk, Worthington Country Club, and Lighthouse Bay, homes were built with 200-amp service that is typically adequate but may need evaluation before adding EV chargers or whole home generators. In the more established high-end communities of Naples, including Pelican Bay, Park Shore, Moorings, and Royal Harbor, a mix of older and newer service sizes exists depending on when homes were built or last renovated.

On Sanibel Island and Captiva Island, the combination of aging infrastructure, post-storm renovation activity, and the trend toward larger electrical loads in renovated properties means panel evaluations are particularly important. Our office frequently works on service upgrades in these communities following hurricane-related reconstruction projects.

When to Call Us

If you are unsure whether your current panel is adequately sized, if you are planning to add major new electrical loads, or if you are experiencing recurring breaker trips that may be related to insufficient capacity, give us a call. We will walk through your situation, perform a load calculation if needed, and give you a clear recommendation specific to your home. Reach us at (239) 482-1122 or use the form below.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I install a 200-amp panel myself?
No. Panel replacement requires a licensed electrical contractor in Florida. Service entrance work involves conductors that remain live at all times at potentially fatal voltages, and the work must be permitted and inspected.
Will upgrading my panel reduce my electric bill?
A panel upgrade itself does not reduce electricity consumption. However, a properly sized system allows efficient, safe operation of all your electrical loads without the inefficiencies of an overtaxed system.
How do I know if my current panel is undersized?
Signs include frequent breaker trips, inability to add new circuits, difficulty running multiple high-draw appliances simultaneously, and a load calculation confirming insufficient capacity.
Can I add a subpanel instead of upgrading my main panel?
A subpanel adds circuit space but does not increase the total amperage available from the utility. If the main panel's service size is the limiting factor, a subpanel alone will not resolve the issue. Our team can evaluate whether a subpanel, a main panel upgrade, or both is the right solution for your situation.
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Need Service in Southwest Florida?

The licensed electricians and HVAC technicians at Mabry Brothers have served Fort Myers, Estero, Bonita Springs, Naples, Sanibel Island, and Captiva Island since 1995.

For immediate assistance, please call our office directly at (239) 482-1122.

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