Spa & hot-tub wiring
Dedicated 50–60A circuits, GFCI disconnects, and code-compliant bonding for portable, built-in, and swim-spa installs.

A hot tub that shows up on a truck needs more than an outlet. Most portable spas require a dedicated 50A or 60A circuit, a GFCI disconnect within line of sight of the tub, a proper bonding connection to the tub's bonding lug, and a permit.
We do this work the same way we do pool work: a load calc on the main panel first, a new circuit and disconnect sized to the tub's nameplate, and a bonding verification before the tub is filled. For swim spas and built-in hot tubs the scope is bigger — think subpanel, pump wiring, heater circuit, and sometimes a separate lighting run — and the inspection paperwork is no different.
If you already have a tub and you're not sure the wiring is right, we'll come out, open the disconnect, and tell you honestly. Most of the tubs we look at are fine. Some of them aren't.
Often booked together.
Residential pool electrical
New construction and retrofit wiring for inground and above-ground pools—subpanels, GFCI, equipment-pad runs, and final inspections.
03Commercial pool electrical
HOA, hotel, condo, and municipal pools. Equipment-room upgrades, variable-speed pump wiring, and motor control centers.
04Underwater & landscape lighting
LED niche retrofits, Fiberstars, color-changing controls, deck-perimeter lighting, and low-voltage landscape runs.
Pick up the phone. That’s how this works.
Estimates are free. Paul usually answers, and if he can’t, he calls back the same day. We book one to three weeks out for residential work; commercial timelines vary.
(860) 827-8504