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Hot tub feeds with proper bonding, pool wiring, sub-panels for sheds, exterior receptacles and landscape lighting.
By submitting this form you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms. If you provide a phone number, you consent to receive calls and SMS messages from Enhanced Electric about your project — message and data rates may apply, reply STOP to opt out. We don’t sell or share your info.
Hot tub disconnect & 240V feed
Equipotential bonding (NEC 680)
Pool pump & filter wiring
Pool light wiring (low-voltage)
Sub-panels for pool equipment
Detached shed & garage feeds
Outdoor GFCI receptacles
Landscape & deck lighting
Hot tub and pool wiring is a place where shortcuts are dangerous and code compliance is non-negotiable. The National Electrical Code Article 680 spells out specific requirements for equipment grounding, equipotential bonding, GFCI protection, and disconnect placement around pools and hot tubs — and an inspector who isn't satisfied will fail the install.
A typical hot tub install is a 50A or 60A 240V circuit run from the main panel to a weatherproof disconnect within sight of the tub, then a short run to the spa pack. The bonding step — connecting all the metal parts (the tub frame, ladder, pump, conduit, and a #8 solid copper bonding ring around the perimeter) to a single point — is what most DIY installs and budget contractors skip. We do not skip it. It's the difference between an electrical fault that trips a breaker and one that energizes the water.
Pools are similar but bigger. The pool pump, the niche light, the shell itself (if metal), and any deck rebar all bond to a common bonding grid. Pump motors get GFCI protection. Underwater lights run from a low-voltage transformer with a junction box at least 18 inches above water level. We pull the permit, schedule the inspection, and walk through what each piece does so the homeowner understands the safety logic.
Some smaller portable spas (typically 110V plug-and-play models) are designed for that. Most full-size hot tubs need a dedicated 240V circuit with proper bonding. The hot tub manual will specify; we work to that spec.
Half a day to a full day, depending on the run from the panel and whether we need a sub-panel. We typically do this between hot tub delivery day and the installer's start day.
Yes — every county and city in the Upstate requires an electrical permit for hot tub circuits. We pull it, schedule the inspection, and coordinate with the hot tub installer.
By submitting this form you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms. If you provide a phone number, you consent to receive calls and SMS messages from Enhanced Electric about your project — message and data rates may apply, reply STOP to opt out. We don’t sell or share your info.