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Attached are 2 pictures of my breaker panel. I know instinctively that there is a lot that's not right with it, but what I'm most concerned about is the total capacity.

It looks to my untrained eye like the maximum capacity is 150 Amps, but the sum of the individual circuits seems to be 550 Amps.

Am I missing something obvious?

Notes: The 100A circuit goes to a subpanel for an addition. The 30A dryer circuit and 50A are being abandoned because what had been a mother/daughter home is being combined into one household, so a kitchen and a laundry-room are going away.

Breaker Panel

Main Service Disconnect

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    Quite often the total on the breakers will exceed the main breaker. You don't use all the power at the same time, might only be using a small percentage of each breakers rating. The main breaker is the total you can use at once. Each breaker is labeled for the max it can use, might have a 20amp breaker, but you only use 2amps most of the time.
    – crip659
    Oct 21, 2021 at 20:10
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    #1 problem I see is, having pushed the largest breakers together, the bottom row has a 50A opposite a 100A. That's 150A on those bus stabs. Stab limit is 125A. Opposite that 100 needs to be a couple of 15's or 20's. The better way is stack the large breakers on one column with smalls opposite them. Oct 21, 2021 at 21:27
  • @Harper-ReinstateMonica Is that for all panels or just that type? This is good to know for DIYers, most would not think of that.
    – crip659
    Oct 21, 2021 at 22:01
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    @crip659 it's a labeled requirement on some panels, and a best practice on all. Oct 21, 2021 at 22:09
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    How many square feet is your house, how many breakers feed kitchen receptacle circuits, and how many HP is the pump on the breaker in the top right? Also, are the currently-used range and dryer gas or electric, and can you get us photos of the subpanel for that matter, as well as the nameplate on any air conditioner that's present? Oct 22, 2021 at 1:43

3 Answers 3

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TL;DR Probably OK, but need to calculate to be sure

In general, most breakers in a panel are either only used most of the time at a small fraction of capacity (e.g., 15A and 20A circuits that most of the time have at most a few Amps in use) or not concurrently (e.g., heat vs. air conditioning) or only for short periods of time (e.g., garbage disposal).

In addition, the main breaker (150A in your panel) is for 240V and each single breaker is only 120V. For example, at the top of the panel you have 2 single 20A breakers on the left and a 20A double breaker (pump) on the right. That looks like 80A but is really 80A @ 120V and only 40A @ 240V (which is what matters). Using that example, the 20A double-breaker for the pump may well run at 16A continuous, but the 20A single breakers likely use only a few Amps most of the time with occasional short periods of more power (e.g., turn on the toaster and use 12A for 10 minutes).

The end result is that you can have 550A of individual breakers but only 150A of supply (main breaker) and be just fine.

There is a real process, load calculation, to figure out the "right" service size needed. However, a very rough calculation is to run down all the breakers and add up all the major circuits that might typically be running at one time (e.g., water heater, pump, air conditioning) and then add in a reasonable number for the other circuits (estimate total lighting load, which shouldn't be much with LEDs, typical small appliance, computer, TV, etc.).

The one problem is when an initial load calculation is done at construction (or major renovation) time and then additional big things are added. The two that often come up are:

  • On Demand Water Heater - A typical traditional tank water heater might use 40A @ 240V. An on demand water heater can easily use 3 times as much power. That can overload an electrical system that previously had lots of room to spare. Which is one reason not to get an on demand electric water heater. (There are other reasons as well.)
  • Electric Vehicle Charging - This can easily add 40A of continuous (e.g., several hours at a time) usage.
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    Load calculations are still usually going to way overstate the actual load that will be on the panel. Another thing you can do is place an ammeter on the panel for 30 days to measure the maximum demand.
    – Steve M
    Oct 22, 2021 at 14:26
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Your untrained eye is doing OK. The 150 amp breaker is your main breaker and disconnect. The remaining breakers are listed as the maximum current they will allow to pass based on the wire size connected to them, not necessarily the equipment they're connected to. All the breaker are never used to full capacity at the same time so as long as the total usage is less than 150 amps, you'll be OK. There's a lot of diversity in the loads drawn in a house. BTW, you have a Cutler Hammer panel and breakers and they are great.

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150A service into a home is ok. Considering your big appliances are ran from utility gas. Not often will you see a load close to what your main/sub breaker is rated for save for when appliances like hvac startup, and thats only for a few miliseconds. Even then breakers are spec'd to allow for the inrush current. What I notice with the panel is, firstly its a hot mess which functionally it appears ok, but cleaning up the gutters of all that cabling makes troubleshooting easier. Secondly, you have double-tapped/landed neutral conductors on the neutral bar. I would have that rectified, as double landing conductors like that can lead to problems down the road i.e. lost/loose neutral which isnt a good thing. Another thing I noticed, the age of those CH breakers in the panel. As they age tolerances can change and start giving nuisance trips etc. So be mindful of that, as you may turn a breaker off and it might not reset again.

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