2026 local cost data for Jacksonville, Florida. $75-$170/hr, DBPR EC license required, generator demand growing post-hurricane.
Enter your details for a Jacksonville-specific 2026 estimate based on local labor rates.
Jacksonville electrical work has been reshaped by three trends since 2020: EV adoption, generator demand after hurricane events, and home additions. Jacksonville has a humid subtropical climate with hot summers (90-95 °F), mild winters, and a hurricane season running June through November · though direct hits are less frequent than South Florida. Older homes with 100-amp service panels increasingly need 200A upgrades to support modern loads.
A typical Jacksonville electrical project runs $420-$7,200 depending on scope. $75-$170/hr, DBPR EC license required, generator demand growing post-hurricane. Panel upgrades to 200A are the most common large project, running $2,500-$4,500 in Jacksonville.
City of Jacksonville Building Inspection Division permits average 4-6 weeks for typical residential work Electrical permits run $80-$250 for major work. Florida requires the contractor to hold a DBPR EC (Certified Electrical Contractor) license; verify at myfloridalicense.com.
Jacksonville metro hosts roughly 10,000 DBPR-licensed contractors with EC-licensed electricians making up roughly 6-8% of the total. Jacksonville labor runs at the national average. EV charger installs run $1,500-$2,800 in Jacksonville; combining EV install with a needed panel upgrade saves significant cost vs separate projects.
Generator and transfer switch installations have grown significantly after hurricane events. A whole-house standby generator (Generac, Kohler, Briggs & Stratton) runs $7,000-$13,000 installed including the transfer switch and gas line connection. Portable-with-interlock setups run $2,500-$4,000 and provide essential-loads coverage. Natural gas is preferred where available; propane works in areas without gas service.
Choosing a Jacksonville contractor: Florida DBPR licensing is strict · DBPR EC (Certified Electrical Contractor) is the standard for this work. Verify licensing, insurance, and bond status at myfloridalicense.com before signing. Jacksonville metro hosts roughly 10,000 DBPR-licensed contractors; competitive bidding is realistic for most projects. Three written bids, references from recent Jacksonville clients, and a clear written scope of work prevent the most common disputes. Humid subtropical (lower hurricane risk than S. FL) conditions and Florida Building Code requirements both reward contractors with deep local experience over lowest-bid generalists.
| Factor | Jacksonville | National Avg |
|---|---|---|
| Avg Cost | $420-$7,200 | See national avg |
| Labor Index | 1.00 (at the national average) | 1.00 baseline |
| Climate | Humid subtropical (lower hurricane risk than S. FL) | Varies |
| Wind Zone (FBC) | 130-140 mph wind zone under Florida Building Code | IBC 90-115 mph typical |
| DBPR License | EC required | State varies |
Estimates based on regional 2026 construction cost data, regional contractor cost data 2026, and US Bureau of Labor Statistics regional wage data for the Jacksonville MSA. Results are for informational purposes only.
Last updated: April 2026 · Jacksonville labor index: 1.00 (regional market data)
Jacksonville electrical costs range widely: outlet/switch install $200-$500; 200A panel upgrade $2,500-$4,500; Level 2 EV charger $1,500-$2,800; generator with transfer switch $7,000-$13,000; whole-house rewire $7,500-$15,000. $75-$170/hr, DBPR EC license required, generator demand growing post-hurricane.
Yes if you have a 100A panel and are adding any of: EV charging, central AC replacement, induction cooktop, electric water heater, generator transfer switch, or major addition. Most 1960s-80s Jacksonville homes have 100A panels that cannot accommodate modern loads. Panel upgrades take 1-2 days and cost $2,500-$4,500.
Jacksonville Level 2 EV charger installations run $1,500-$2,800 for typical garage installs including the charger unit. Cost varies with distance from panel, finished-wall access, and whether a panel upgrade is needed first. Federal Section 30C credit covers 30% of EV charger installation up to $1,000.
For most Jacksonville homes, yes · especially after the active 2024 hurricane season (Debby, Helene, Milton). Whole-house standby generators ($7,000-$13,000 installed) provide automatic backup. Portable-with-interlock setups ($2,500-$4,000) cover essential loads. Natural gas is preferred over propane where gas service is available.
Yes for most work. Jacksonville requires permits for panel upgrades, service upgrades, EV chargers, generators, additions, and rewires. Simple outlet/switch replacements typically need no permit. City of Jacksonville Building Inspection Division permits average 4-6 weeks for typical residential work Florida requires the contractor to hold a DBPR EC license; verify at myfloridalicense.com.