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As more Manhattan Beach homeowners install EV chargers, one of the most important questions that comes up early in the planning process is whether the existing electrical panel can support the additional load — or whether an upgrade is needed first. It's not a question with a universal answer, and the wrong assumption in either direction creates problems.
EV chargers, particularly Level 2 systems, place a continuous high-current demand on the electrical system. Many Manhattan Beach homes, especially older properties near the beach, were built with 100-amp service panels that weren't designed to accommodate this kind of load alongside modern appliances and HVAC systems. Understanding when a panel upgrade is required — and what that process involves — helps you plan the installation correctly and avoid delays, failed inspections, and unexpected mid-project costs.
Bolt Blitz Electric, a licensed C-10 electrical contractor serving Manhattan Beach and Los Angeles County, evaluates panels and installs EV charger systems throughout the South Bay. Here's what you need to know.
Why EV Chargers Require More Power
Level 2 EV chargers operate on 240-volt circuits and are classified as continuous loads — equipment that draws full current for extended periods during every use. Per NEC Article 625, EV charging equipment must be installed on a dedicated circuit. Per NEC Article 210, continuous loads must be calculated at 125 percent of their rated current when sizing the circuit and breaker. In practice, this means a typical Level 2 charger installation requires a 40-amp, 50-amp, or 60-amp dedicated circuit depending on the charger's output rating — a significant addition to a panel that's already serving the home's existing loads.
Whether your panel can support this additional demand without an upgrade is determined by a load calculation — not by looking at whether breaker slots are available, and not by guessing based on the panel's age or size alone.
Common Panel Sizes and EV Charger Compatibility
Residential electrical panels are rated by the total amperage they can deliver to the home. The panel size determines the upper limit of what the electrical system can support — and how much headroom exists for new loads like an EV charger.
| Panel Size | Common In | EV Charger Compatibility |
|---|---|---|
| 100-amp service | Older Manhattan Beach homes | Often insufficient — load calculation required; upgrade frequently needed |
| 125-amp service | Mid-era residential properties | May have limited headroom — load calculation required |
| 200-amp service | Newer or updated homes | Generally sufficient — load calculation confirms available capacity |
| 400-amp service | Larger or updated properties | Typically more than sufficient for EV charging and future loads |
Panel size alone doesn't tell the full story — a 200-amp panel that's already heavily loaded by HVAC, electric appliances, pool equipment, and other circuits may have less available headroom than its rating suggests. The load calculation accounts for all existing loads to determine what's actually available for a new EV charger circuit.
Signs You May Need a Panel Upgrade
While a load calculation is the definitive way to determine whether an upgrade is needed, several warning signs suggest your panel may already be at or near its capacity limits before an EV charger is even added:
Limited or No Available Breaker Space
If your panel is full with no open breaker slots, adding a new dedicated circuit for an EV charger isn't possible without modifications — which typically means a panel upgrade or the addition of a tandem breaker where permitted.
100-Amp Service
Homes with 100-amp service panels are the most likely to require an upgrade before EV charger installation. Modern households with electric appliances, air conditioning, and general usage frequently consume a significant portion of a 100-amp service before any EV load is added.
Frequent Breaker Tripping
Breakers that trip regularly under normal household usage indicate that circuits are already operating near their rated capacity. Adding an EV charger load to a system that's already being stressed in this way increases the risk of sustained overloading.
Outdated Panel Brand
Panels manufactured by Federal Pacific Electric or Zinsco are widely considered outdated and have documented reliability concerns. Regardless of EV charger installation, these panels are commonly recommended for replacement — and an EV charger installation is a logical time to address the panel simultaneously.
What a Panel Upgrade Involves
A panel upgrade increases the home's electrical service capacity and creates the headroom needed to safely add new high-demand circuits like an EV charger. The scope of work depends on what the existing system can support and what the load calculation shows is needed.
Typical panel upgrade work includes upgrading from 100-amp to 200-amp service where the utility infrastructure supports it, installing a new panel enclosure with additional breaker capacity, reconfiguring existing circuits as needed, and updating grounding and bonding to meet current California Electrical Code requirements. Panel upgrades must comply with all current code requirements and are subject to permit and inspection — they cannot be completed as unpermitted work.
Permits and Inspections
Panel upgrades in Manhattan Beach require permits and inspections — because they involve modifying the home's electrical service, which is among the most consequential electrical work that can be performed on a residential property. Permits for Manhattan Beach and surrounding Los Angeles County areas are processed through the LA County EPIC-LA system.
Permit Processing:
↗ LA County EPIC-LA Permit SystemAfter the upgrade is complete, an inspection verifies proper panel installation, correct breaker sizing throughout, safe wiring connections, and full grounding and bonding compliance. This inspection is required before the upgraded panel can be approved for use and before the EV charger installation that follows it can proceed to its own inspection.
SCE Involvement for Panel Upgrades
Panel upgrades that increase the home's service capacity — most commonly from 100-amp to 200-amp service — require coordination with Southern California Edison. SCE needs to upgrade the meter and service drop on their side to match the increased capacity on the home's side. This coordination adds a step to the overall timeline that should be planned for in advance, as SCE scheduling isn't always immediate and can affect the overall project timeline.
Not every panel upgrade requires a service capacity increase — replacing an outdated panel with a new one of the same service rating may not require SCE involvement. The specific scope is determined during the initial evaluation.
SCE Project Resource:
↗ SCE Customer PortalCost of a Panel Upgrade in Manhattan Beach
$2,000 – $5,000+Panel upgrade costs in Manhattan Beach typically fall in this range, depending on the existing electrical system, the service capacity being upgraded to, permit and inspection costs, and whether SCE coordination and meter work are required. When combined with EV charger installation, the total project cost reflects both scopes of work — which is why getting an accurate evaluation before committing to either is the right first step.
Can You Install an EV Charger Without a Panel Upgrade?
Yes — in some cases. Whether a panel upgrade is required depends entirely on what the load calculation shows about your specific electrical system. If the panel has available breaker space and the load calculation confirms sufficient remaining capacity after accounting for all existing circuits, an EV charger can be installed without a panel upgrade. Many Manhattan Beach homes with 200-amp service fall into this category.
The answer to this question cannot be determined without performing the load calculation. Assuming a panel upgrade isn't needed — or assuming it is — without a proper evaluation leads to either unnecessary expense or an installation that fails inspection. The evaluation is the correct starting point, and it's what a licensed electrician does before recommending any course of action.
Why Professional Evaluation Matters
Determining whether your Manhattan Beach home needs a panel upgrade before EV charger installation requires technical analysis of the electrical system — not a guess based on panel age, visual inspection, or general assumptions about your home's electrical capacity. Incorrect assumptions lead to failed inspections when the system can't support the charger as installed, unsafe conditions when an overloaded panel is pushed past its limits, and costly delays when a panel upgrade is discovered mid-project rather than before it started. A licensed electrician performs the load calculation, inspects the panel, identifies any code compliance gaps, and gives you an accurate answer before any work begins — which is the only way to plan and budget a panel upgrade and EV charger installation correctly.
Professional EV Charger and Panel Upgrade Services in Manhattan Beach
Whether your Manhattan Beach home needs a panel upgrade before EV charger installation, or whether the existing panel has sufficient capacity to support the charger directly, Bolt Blitz Electric starts with the evaluation that answers that question accurately — and handles everything from there.
Bolt Blitz Electric provides EV charger installation and panel upgrade services throughout Manhattan Beach, Los Angeles, Lancaster, Palmdale, Santa Clarita, and surrounding Los Angeles County communities.
Our services include EV charger installation, electrical panel upgrades, load calculations, dedicated circuit installation, permit processing, inspection coordination, SCE coordination, and code compliance corrections.
All work is performed in accordance with NEC Article 625 for EV charging systems, NEC Article 220 for load calculations, NEC Article 210 for branch circuits and continuous load sizing, NEC Article 240 for overcurrent protection, NEC Article 250 for grounding and bonding, and the California Electrical Code and Title 24 requirements.
Service Areas: Manhattan Beach, Redondo Beach, Hermosa Beach, El Segundo, Torrance, and Los Angeles County
Licensed & Insured: C-10 Electrical Contractor License
