What each option is
A 200A service upgrade changes the home's main electrical service so the utility, meter, service entrance conductors, main disconnect, grounding electrode system, and panel capacity support a larger calculated load. A subpanel addition keeps the existing service size and adds a feeder-fed panelboard for more breaker spaces near a garage, addition, workshop, HVAC equipment, or EV-ready area. In Washington, the code distinction matters: NEC Article 220 governs the service load calculation, NEC Article 230 governs service entrance equipment, NEC Article 250 governs grounding and bonding, and NEC Article 408 governs panelboards and circuit directories. The service upgrade solves capacity; the subpanel solves distribution. Mixing those two goals is how homeowners buy a panel that still cannot legally carry the planned loads.
State-specific factors
The state-content seed makes this a Washington comparison, not a generic national one. It lists Seattle, Vancouver, Bellevue as the deepest directory metros, identifies Washington L&I — Electrical Licensing (https://lni.wa.gov/licensing-permits/electrical/) for the electrician licensing path, and summarizes licensing this way: Washington requires all construction contractors to register with the Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) as a General or Specialty contractor. Electricians and plumbers are licensed by L&I trade boards. It also gives the Electrical work cost band as $220-$10K with $1.8K typical. The companion buyer-guide context uses the same state-trade source data to ask who pulls the permit, which credential applies, what insurance proof is required, and what inspections close the job. Standards references are included to frame scope, but the adopted local edition still controls. Where the seed does not publish utility tariffs or local amendments, this guide names that gap rather than filling it with guesses. Use the written bid to connect every cost assumption back to those source facts. Ask bidders to attach model numbers, permit responsibility, warranty labor, and excluded repair work to the same line-item scope. The climate planning lens is marine west-side weather, colder eastern counties, seismic concerns, and electric-heavy housing make load and moisture assumptions local. For electrical work, the practical question is whether the house needs new service capacity or only more breaker space near a load cluster. A 200A service upgrade depends on NEC Article 220 load calculation, NEC Article 230 service equipment, meter location, grounding, utility disconnect/reconnect timing, and local inspection scheduling. A subpanel addition depends on feeder ampacity, panelboard rules under NEC Article 408, working clearances, and whether the existing service has capacity left. The seed does not publish utility service rules, so the utility must confirm any meter, service lateral, or overhead drop work.
Cost comparison
Service Upgrade (200A)
$1.8K-$10K
Uses the typical-to-high electrical band because service equipment, utility scheduling, grounding, and exterior work may be involved.
Subpanel Addition
$220-$1.8K
Uses the low-to-typical band when the existing service has spare load capacity and the feeder route is clean.
Source band: Electrical work: $220-$10K (typical $1.8K)
The state-content costBand for Washington lists Electrical work at $220-$10K with $1.8K typical. A subpanel addition normally occupies the low-to-typical part when the existing service has spare calculated capacity and the feeder route is clean. A 200A service upgrade moves toward the typical-to-high part because it can include meter work, service entrance conductors, grounding electrodes, main panel replacement, utility scheduling, exterior repairs, and inspection coordination. The low-to-typical spread is $1.6K; the typical-to-high spread is $8.2K. Treat that second spread as the premium for real capacity, not just more breaker slots.
Permit / inspection differences
Use the Washington licensing primer first: Washington requires all construction contractors to register with the Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) as a General or Specialty contractor. Electricians and plumbers are licensed by L&I trade boards. The trade entry points to Washington L&I — Electrical Licensing (https://lni.wa.gov/licensing-permits/electrical/), with ProFix license slug electrician-license-in-wa. Local permit offices still decide the exact permit type, adopted code edition, and inspection sequence. A 200A service upgrade normally needs an electrical permit, utility coordination, service disconnect/reconnect, grounding and bonding inspection, panel labeling, and often a release before the utility energizes. A subpanel addition also needs an electrical permit, but inspection focuses on feeder size, overcurrent protection, neutral-ground separation, working clearances, and circuit directory. The subpanel avoids utility work only if the existing service load calculation passes.
Verdict by scenario
Verdict Washington: 200A service upgrade Washington versus subpanel addition Washington. Choose 200A service upgrade Washington when Washington load math fails, Washington EV or heat-pump loads are planned, Washington service gear is unsafe, and Washington utility work is unavoidable. Choose subpanel addition Washington when Washington load math passes, Washington breaker spaces are gone, Washington new circuits cluster nearby, and Washington utility disconnect risk can be avoided. Compare Washington capacity calculations, Washington feeder routing, Washington grounding, Washington utility timing, and Washington inspection release before signing.