Modern homes ask more from the electrical system. IGS helps homeowners plan panel replacement, service upgrades, EV charger readiness, heat pump capacity, generator integration, and solar readiness without treating each project as a separate island.
Panel Review
Check the condition and capacity of the existing panel and circuits.
Load Planning
Plan for EV chargers, heat pumps, generators, solar, and other future loads.
Utility Coordination
Identify when service upgrades, meter work, or utility steps are part of the project.
Electrical upgrades are often the foundation for other home improvements. A panel change can affect heat pumps, EV charging, generators, solar, and future renovation work.
We review the whole home so the electrical plan supports what you need now and what may come next.

Capacity
Understand current service and panel limits.
Readiness
Plan for EV, heat pump, solar, generator, and appliance loads.
Execution
Coordinate permit, utility, and installation details.

If you are adding heat pumps, EV charging, solar, a generator, or major appliances, it is better to review electrical capacity early. That prevents redesigns and keeps future work cleaner.

Need Review
We confirm the project goals and the loads that need support.
Panel Review
We evaluate panel condition, available space, grounding, and service capacity.
Upgrade Path
We define whether panel replacement, service upgrade, or circuit work is required.
Coordination
Permits, utility steps, and installation scheduling are coordinated around the project.
Every home has different constraints. We keep the recommendation focused on the project path that actually fits your house, budget, and timing.
Replace outdated or crowded panels when capacity or condition requires it.
Plan a larger service when the home needs more capacity.
Prepare for EV charging, heat pumps, generators, and solar.
Home projects are easier when the next step is clear. We review the existing condition, define the practical project path, coordinate related systems, and keep the work focused on the home.

1. Need Review
We confirm the project goals and the loads that need support.

2. Panel Review
We evaluate panel condition, available space, grounding, and service capacity.

3. Upgrade Path
We define whether panel replacement, service upgrade, or circuit work is required.

4. Coordination
Permits, utility steps, and installation scheduling are coordinated around the project.
A panel upgrade may be needed when the panel is outdated, full, damaged, or undersized for new loads.
No. The right answer depends on the existing service, panel capacity, load calculation, and future plans.
Yes. That is often the best time to plan it because the load requirements are clearer.
When those steps are part of the project, they should be planned up front so the schedule is realistic.
We don’t spam or sell your contact information. Let us meet with you to learn how we can help you start saving energy and building energy independence for your home.