Use this script for your first call or site visit with a licensed electrician. Adapt the language, but hit every point.
'I need to run dedicated electrical service from my main panel to the back yard. The house is an 1830 property in Litchfield, so I want to flag that upfront in case it affects your approach, access, or the panel situation.'
'The end state is three loads on independent circuits: an outdoor barrel sauna on a 240-volt, 40-amp dedicated circuit; a Softub or similar plug-in hot tub on 120 volts, 15 to 20 amps; and a 120-volt circuit for a low-voltage landscape lighting transformer plus a couple outdoor receptacles. I want a subpanel in the yard sized to handle all three loads running concurrently with room for one or two future circuits.'
'The run from the main panel to the back yard is roughly [measure this before calling] feet. I want the wire buried in conduit, not direct-burial. I need to know whether my existing main panel has capacity for the feeder or if we are looking at a panel upgrade too.'
'A few things I need from you: Can you do a site visit to assess the panel and route? What is your timeline for a project like this? And can you give me an itemized quote that breaks out the subpanel, trenching, each circuit, and the permit separately so I can see where the costs land?'
Send this to the electrician before the site visit so the quote is based on real specs, not guesses.
Trenching (biggest swing). Professional trenching runs $3 to $5 per linear foot, or $500 to $1,200 for a typical residential run. Digging the trench yourself saves that entire amount. The work is straightforward but physically demanding. Rent a trencher from Sunbelt Rentals in Torrington for $150 to $250/day if the distance warrants it. Leave the conduit and wire pulling to the electrician.
Feeder wire material, copper vs aluminum. Aluminum feeder wire costs 40 to 60% less than copper for the same ampacity. For a long run (75+ feet), aluminum is standard practice and saves $300 to $600. Requires proper anti-oxidant compound and rated connectors. Not a quality cut. For short runs under 50 feet, copper is simpler and the cost difference is minor.
Subpanel size. A 60A subpanel is cheaper than 100A, but it leaves zero room for future circuits. If you ever add a second 240V load (EV charger, workshop tools, heated outdoor shower), you would need to re-run the feeder. Spend the extra $100 to $200 for 100A now.
Scheduling. Electricians in Northwest CT are busiest May through October. Booking this in late winter or early spring may get better availability and potentially a lower rate. If the trench can be dug before frost, even a November install is possible.
Licensed electrician (non-negotiable). CT requires a licensed E-1 contractor or E-2 journeyperson under an E-1 for all electrical work. No exceptions. Electrician rates in CT run $75 to $125/hour. Expect 10 to 16 hours of labor total for this project scope (two visits: rough-in + final connection).
Permit and inspection. Electrical permit is mandatory in Litchfield for new circuits and subpanels. Typically $75 to $200 depending on scope. The electrician should pull the permit (confirm this is included in the quote). Inspection is required before backfilling the trench.
GFCI breakers on outdoor circuits. NEC requires GFCI protection on all outdoor, wet-location, and spa/hot tub circuits. Adds $40 to $100 per breaker vs standard breakers. This is code, not optional.
Dig the trench yourself. Saves $500 to $1,200. Have the electrician mark the route and depth before you dig. Call 811 (CT Call Before You Dig) at least 3 business days before trenching.
Do not undersize the subpanel. A 60A panel with no spare capacity means re-running the entire feeder if you add one more 240V load. The incremental cost of 100A over 60A is $100 to $200 at install. Replacing a feeder later is $1,500+.
Do not skip the disconnect switch. NEC requires a visible disconnect for the sauna. Skipping it fails inspection and is genuinely dangerous for servicing the heater.
| Item | Low | High |
|---|---|---|
| Subpanel + feeder installation (panel, wire, conduit, labor) | $1,800 | $3,500 |
| Sauna 240V/40A dedicated circuit + disconnect | $500 | $1,200 |
| Softub 120V/20A dedicated circuit + outdoor outlet | $250 | $500 |
| Lighting 120V/20A circuit + 2 to 3 outdoor outlets | $300 | $600 |
| Trenching (if electrician handles it) | $400 | $1,200 |
| Permit + inspection | $75 | $200 |
| Total project (electrician trenches) | $3,300 | $6,500 |
| Total project (you trench yourself) | $2,800 | $5,300 |
Realistic price range for Litchfield County CT. Sources: HomeGuide 2026 subpanel data, Angi 2026 electrical panel pricing, multiple sauna installation cost guides, CT-specific data from chestnutelectric.com. Ranges reflect Northwest CT labor rates ($75 to $125/hr) and residential project scope. The low end assumes a short run (under 50 feet), no panel upgrade needed, and standard soil conditions. The high end assumes 80+ foot run, minor panel work, and rocky/difficult trenching.
Any quote under $2,500 for this full scope is suspiciously low. It likely means the electrician is undersizing the subpanel, skipping conduit for direct burial, or not including permit/inspection. Ask what is excluded.
If your main panel is 100A and already loaded, a service upgrade to 200A adds $1,300 to $2,500. You will not know this until the electrician inspects the panel. If the main panel is already 200A with spare capacity, this cost disappears entirely.
Connecticut requires an E-1 (unlimited electrical contractor) license for any firm performing residential electrical work. Journeypersons (E-2) can do the work but must be employed by an E-1 contractor. Verify the contractor license at portal.ct.gov/dcp or elicense.ct.gov before signing anything.
Require proof of general liability insurance and workers compensation before work begins. Any electrician who balks at providing this is not someone you want on your property.
The electrician (as E-1 contractor) should pull the permit. This is standard. If they ask you to pull it, that is a red flag: it often means they are not properly licensed. The permit goes under their license number and ties them to the inspection.
Ask for 2 to 3 recent residential projects in Litchfield County, specifically subpanel or outdoor service work. When calling references, ask: Did they pull the permit? Did they pass inspection on the first try? Were there any change orders after the quoted price?
The 1830 house may have non-standard wiring, an older panel, or access constraints that affect how the feeder exits the building. Any electrician who does not ask about the age or condition of the existing electrical system during the first conversation should not be on the shortlist.