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Electrical Cost · New Hampshire

Electrical Cost in New Hampshire (2026)

Electrical in New Hampshire typically runs $11,100–$25,400 for a complete electrical package on a 2,000 sq ft home (200A service, panel, branch circuits, devices, lighting).

Electrical conduit forming geometric patterns with junction boxes

New Hampshire context that moves electrical wiring cost

Climate: Cold New England climate with heavy snowfall, deep frost lines, and short building season. White Mountains region has extreme weather conditions.

Labor market: Above national average.

Permits & codes: New Hampshire follows the State Building Code based on the IRC. The state has no sales tax, making material purchases tax-free. Local enforcement varies — some towns have minimal oversight while others (especially in southern NH) have comprehensive requirements.

About electrical wiring in New Hampshire

Residential electrical covers the service entrance from the utility, main breaker panel, all branch circuits run through framing, device boxes for switches and outlets, lighting circuits, dedicated appliance circuits, and code-required protection (AFCI, GFCI). The full package for a 2,000 sq ft home is typically 18–24 circuits and 1–2 weeks of work for a 2-person crew.

The 2023 National Electrical Code adoption cycle pushed AFCI protection into nearly every branch circuit and tightened GFCI requirements. EV charger pre-wires became near-universal in 2024–2026 new construction. These changes alone added $400–$1,200 to a typical bid compared to 2019 pricing.

What moves the price

Service size

200 amp is the new residential default for any home that uses electric range, electric dryer, or any 240V EV charging. 100 amp service is cheaper ($500–$900 less) but rare in new construction. 400 amp service for an EV-charging, all-electric home adds $1,800–$3,500 in panel, meter base, and feeder upgrades.

NEC adoption cycle

States on the 2020 or 2023 NEC require AFCI on nearly every branch circuit and GFCI in more locations than the 2017 cycle. California, Massachusetts, Oregon, Washington, and New York are on the most recent code. AFCI breakers run $35–$55 each vs $8–$15 for standard breakers — across 20+ circuits that adds $400–$800 to the panel cost alone.

EV charger pre-wire

A 50-amp dedicated circuit to the garage with a NEMA 14-50 receptacle adds $400–$900 if done during rough-in. A hardwired Level 2 charger (Tesla Wall Connector, ChargePoint Home Flex) adds another $500–$800 for the unit. Retrofitting after drywall is $1,500–$3,000.

Solar and battery readiness

California Title 24 mandates solar on new construction, adding a separate $8,000–$18,000 line item not included in the electrical baseline above. Battery pre-wire for future Tesla Powerwall or equivalent adds $600–$1,400 for the disconnect, transfer switch panel, and conduit run.

Union vs non-union markets

Major urban markets (Chicago, NYC, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Seattle) have heavy IBEW union penetration. Union electrician total comp (wages plus benefits) runs $95–$130/hour all-in vs $50–$80 non-union. That premium flows through to the total job cost in a meaningful way.

Lighting plan complexity

Builder-grade lighting (12–18 recessed cans, a few ceiling fixtures, basic outdoor lights) is included in the base price. A designer-spec lighting plan with cove lighting, multiple pendant runs, accent and task lighting, and outdoor architectural fixtures adds $1,500–$8,000+ in labor and switching infrastructure.

Electrical cost across New Hampshire metros

Within New Hampshire the spread between metros is usually 25–40% of the state midpoint. Major metros pay more than rural areas because of labor demand, permit complexity, and material delivery overhead.

  • Manchester / Nashua — typical home build $180–$410/sq ft range
  • Concord — typical home build $165–$380/sq ft range
  • Seacoast (Portsmouth) — typical home build $200–$460/sq ft range
  • Lakes Region — typical home build $190–$430/sq ft range

Frequently asked questions

How much does electrical wiring cost in New Hampshire?
A complete electrical package for a 2,000 sq ft home in New Hampshire runs $11,100–$25,400. That covers 200-amp service, panel, all branch circuits, devices, lighting circuits, and code-required AFCI/GFCI protection. It does not include fixture purchases or solar.
What NEC code does New Hampshire follow?
New Hampshire adopts a version of the National Electrical Code on its own cycle. Most states are on 2017 or 2020 NEC currently; some have adopted 2023 NEC. The newer the code, the more AFCI and GFCI protection is required, which raises both labor and breaker costs. Verify with your municipal building department before pulling permits.
Do I need to add an EV charger circuit in New Hampshire?
Not legally required in most New Hampshire jurisdictions, but it's now near-universal in new construction and adds significant resale value. The right time to add the circuit is during rough-in ($400–$900); retrofit later is $1,500–$3,000+. Even if you don't own an EV today, the next owner likely will.
How long does electrical rough-in take in New Hampshire?
For a 2,000 sq ft home: 4–6 days for rough-in (running all wire through framing, setting boxes, installing the panel and service entrance) and 2–3 days for finish (devices, fixtures, panel cover, final inspection). Total elapsed time including New Hampshire inspections is typically 2–3 weeks.
Are smoke and CO detectors included?
Yes — hardwired interconnected smoke and CO detectors are required by code and included in any new-construction electrical package. Plan for one smoke detector per bedroom plus one in the hallway and one per floor, and one CO detector per floor (or one per sleeping area in newer code cycles). 7–12 detectors total for a typical home.

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Related

See the full 50-state electrical wiring cost comparison to see how New Hampshire stacks up nationally.

For broader benchmarks across New Hampshire, see the cost to build a house in New Hampshire.

Other trade costs for New Hampshire: