Remodels & Additions · Twin Cities Metro

Remodel & Addition Electrical Wiring in the Twin Cities

Almost every kitchen remodel, basement finish, or room addition trips a code requirement — new dedicated circuits, AFCI/GFCI protection, sometimes a bigger panel, and always a permit. We scope the electrical alongside your project so it passes inspection the first time and you’re not opening finished walls back up later.

Licensed, bonded & insured (MN EA761814) · We pull the permit & coordinate inspection · Fixed written quotes

Here’s the thing most homeowners don’t find out until they’re mid-project: the electrical in a Twin Cities remodel almost never gets to stay as-is. The moment you open a wall, add a circuit, or move a load, the new work has to meet the current code — and in an older Longfellow bungalow or a 1970s split-level, “current code” is a long way from what’s in there now. Planning that in from the start is the difference between a smooth inspection and a nasty surprise after the drywall’s up.

What remodel electrical typically costs

Common remodel electrical work Typical price*
Add an outlet, switch, or dimmer $275–$475 per device
New dedicated circuit (range, microwave, dishwasher, EV, etc.) $475–$1,850
Recessed “can” lights & fixtures $225–$550 each
AFCI/GFCI breaker (code-required on new circuits) $295–$526
New sub-panel (basement, garage, or addition) $1,400–$2,300
Panel or service upgrade (if capacity is maxed) $7,700–$9,500

*These are real per-item ranges from our own Twin Cities work. A kitchen or basement project usually combines several of them, so we don’t quote from a chart — we look at your plans and give you one firm written number.

Do I need to update electrical for a remodel, basement finish, or kitchen remodel?

Almost always. Minnesota’s 2023 code requires AFCI/GFCI protection, dedicated circuits for kitchens and appliances, and often more capacity, so remodels, basement finishes, and kitchen projects nearly always trigger electrical work and a permit. The good news is that scoping it up front is cheap; discovering it after the cabinets are hung is not. We’ve walked into plenty of half-finished basements where the framing was done, the drywall was on order, and nobody had thought about where the circuits were coming from. Bringing us in during planning — not after — is what keeps a project on schedule.

What does Minnesota’s 2023 code actually require?

The short version: arc-fault (AFCI) protection on most living-space circuits, ground-fault (GFCI) protection anywhere near water or in unfinished space (kitchens, baths, basements, garages, outdoors), tamper-resistant receptacles, and dedicated circuits for the big kitchen appliances. Smoke and CO detectors usually have to be brought current too. None of it is exotic — but all of it applies to the parts of your home you’re touching, which is exactly what catches people off guard.

Kitchen remodels: why the wiring almost always changes

A modern kitchen is one of the most electrically demanding rooms in the house, and older ones simply weren’t built for it. Code wants at least two 20-amp small-appliance circuits for your countertop outlets, plus separate dedicated circuits for the dishwasher, disposal, microwave, and range. Drop a new induction range or a beverage fridge onto a 1960s kitchen that’s running on a single circuit and you’ll be resetting breakers every dinner. We rework the circuits, add island and peninsula receptacles where code now requires them, and wire in under-cabinet and recessed lighting while the walls are open.

Basement finishes: the electrical you can’t skip

Finishing a basement means new lighting, receptacles spaced to code, GFCI protection, and often egress-related and smoke/CO work — all under permit. Basements also have a habit of exposing bigger issues: this is frequently where we find an undersized or Federal Pacific panel, or a service that’s already at its limit. Because the panel often lives down there, a basement finish is also the natural time to upgrade or relocate it if it’s in the way of your new layout.

Additions & bump-outs: does the service still keep up?

New square footage means new circuits, and sometimes a sub-panel to feed the addition cleanly rather than snaking long runs back to the main. The real question with an addition is whether your existing service can carry the extra load — a heated three-season porch or a primary-suite addition can be the straw that pushes a 100-amp home over the edge. We answer that with a load calculation, not a shrug, and if it’s close we’ll tell you.

Will my remodel force a panel or service upgrade?

Sometimes — and honestly, sometimes not. It depends entirely on how much spare capacity your current service has versus what you’re adding, which a load calculation tells us for certain. Many remodels add circuits with room to spare; all-electric kitchens, additions, and EV or heat-pump loads on an older 100-amp service are the ones that usually need a jump to 200-amp service. We’d rather run the math than sell you an upgrade you don’t need.

Do remodels require an electrical permit in Minnesota?

Yes. Any new wiring, added circuits, or panel work requires an electrical permit and a state inspection. Beyond being the law, permitted-and-inspected work is what protects you at resale and with your insurer — unpermitted electrical is a classic deal-killer during a home sale. We pull the permit, schedule the inspection, and hand you the sign-off.

Plan the electrical before the walls close

If there’s one takeaway, it’s this: decide the electrical while the studs are still showing. Rough-in is cheap and fast when the wall is open and brutal once it’s finished. Get us in during design, and by the time the drywall goes up your circuits, boxes, and capacity are already handled — no change orders, no reopening finished rooms. If a full rewire makes more sense than piecemeal work, we’ll tell you that too.
Planning a kitchen, basement, or addition in the Twin Cities? Get the electrical scoped and priced before the walls close.
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Remodel wiring FAQ

Can I finish my basement without an electrical permit in Minnesota?No. Finishing a basement adds circuits, lighting, and outlets, and that requires an electrical permit and a state inspection. Skipping it is the kind of thing that surfaces at resale or during an insurance claim, so it's not worth the shortcut — and we handle the permit for you.
Do I really need AFCI and GFCI protection in a remodel?In most cases, yes. Minnesota's 2023 code requires AFCI protection for most living-space circuits and GFCI protection in kitchens, baths, basements, garages, and outdoors. When you open up walls or add circuits, the new work has to meet today's code even if the rest of the house predates it.
How many circuits does a modern kitchen need?More than most older kitchens have. Code calls for at least two 20-amp small-appliance circuits for countertop outlets, plus dedicated circuits for the dishwasher, disposal, microwave, and range. A 1960s kitchen running on one or two circuits will trip constantly once you add modern appliances — that's usually the first thing we fix.
Will you work with my general contractor or remodeler?Yes, all the time. We coordinate rough-in around framing, insulation, and drywall so your GC's schedule doesn't slip, and we come back for trim-out once the walls are closed. If you're managing the project yourself, we'll tell you exactly when we need to be on site.
Will my remodel force a panel or service upgrade?Not always. Whether your existing service can carry the new load comes down to a load calculation, not a guess. Plenty of remodels add circuits without touching the panel; others — especially additions or all-electric kitchens on an older 100-amp service — do need more capacity. We run the numbers before you're committed.
When in the project should the electrician come in?Twice, ideally. Once at rough-in, after framing but before insulation and drywall, to run wire and set boxes — and once at the end for devices, fixtures, and the panel work. Getting us in early is what keeps you from cutting open finished walls later.