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Underground vs. Overhead Service Upgrade in San Francisco: Which Is Right for Your Home?

For most San Francisco homeowners, underground electrical service is the better long-term choice — but costs 2–3× more upfront. An underground service upgrade runs $3,000–$8,000+ vs. $1,500–$3,500 for an overhead upgrade, depending on trenching distance, landscaping, and PG&E coordination. In SF’s hillside fire zones and undergrounding districts, underground conversion is often required. For flat neighborhoods with no near-term renovation plans, overhead upgrades remain a cost-effective and fully code-compliant option.

Updated March 2026 12 min read GridSync Market Insights Team San Francisco Electrical
$1,500–$3,500
Overhead Upgrade (Installed)
$3,000–$8,000+
Underground Upgrade (Installed)
PG&E Rule 20
Governs Undergrounding in CA
2–3× Longer
Underground Lifespan Advantage

When it comes time to upgrade your electrical panel or increase your home’s service capacity, one of the first decisions you’ll face is often invisible to homeowners: does your home use overhead or underground electrical service? And if you have a choice — or are required to change — which is the right path for a San Francisco home?

This isn’t just a technical question. In San Francisco, where wildfire risk, aging infrastructure, utility regulations, and neighborhood aesthetics all collide, the decision between underground and overhead service has real financial, safety, and legal implications. This guide covers every angle specific to San Francisco and the Bay Area.

San Francisco Is Different

Unlike most U.S. cities, San Francisco has aggressive undergrounding initiatives, High Fire Threat Districts in its hillside neighborhoods, and PG&E rules that can require underground conversion during major upgrades. Context matters enormously here — what’s optional elsewhere may be mandatory in SF.

SECTION 1

How to Identify Your Electrical Service Type

Before you plan any upgrade, you need to know what you’re working with. The difference is easy to spot once you know what to look for:

You Have Overhead Service If…

  • Wires run from a utility pole to your home via a weatherhead/riser at the roofline
  • The service entrance cables drop down the exterior wall from above
  • You can see the point where utility lines attach to your building
  • Your meter panel has conduit going upward toward the roofline
  • You can see the service drop wire between the pole and your house
🔌

You Have Underground Service If…

  • No overhead wires connect to your home from a utility pole
  • Conduit exits the bottom or side of your meter panel going into the ground
  • Your meter is mounted on a post near the street (common in newer SF construction)
  • The service entrance comes up through a concrete pad or underground vault
  • Your block has no visible utility poles serving homes directly
Still Not Sure?

Look at your neighbors’ homes on the same block. If the street has underground utilities, you almost certainly have underground service too. When in doubt, a licensed C-10 electrician can confirm your service type in minutes during a free assessment — and knowing this before you plan an upgrade prevents costly surprises.

SECTION 2

What Is Overhead Electrical Service?

Overhead electrical service is the traditional method of delivering power from the utility grid to your home via wires suspended on poles above ground. In San Francisco, millions of older residential properties — particularly in flat neighborhoods like the Sunset, Richmond, and Excelsior — still use overhead service that was installed decades ago.

How Overhead Service Works

PG&E’s distribution lines run along poles on your street. A service drop — typically three wires (two hot, one neutral) — connects from the pole to your home’s weatherhead or service entrance at the roofline. From there, service entrance cables run down the exterior wall to your meter, then into your main electrical panel inside or on the exterior of your home.

Advantages of Overhead Service in San Francisco

  • Lower installation cost: No trenching required — the main cost is the panel hardware and electrician labor
  • Faster installation: A typical overhead panel upgrade can be completed in a single day
  • Easier maintenance and repairs: Faults are visually identifiable and accessible without excavation
  • Familiar to all electricians: Every licensed C-10 contractor works with overhead service regularly
  • No landscaping disruption: No need to dig up driveways, yards, or garden beds

Disadvantages of Overhead Service in San Francisco

  • Vulnerable to weather and wind: San Francisco’s fog, winds, and occasional storm events can damage service drops
  • Wildfire risk: Overhead lines can arc, sag, or make contact with trees — a significant concern in SF’s hillside High Fire Threat Districts
  • Aesthetic impact: Poles and wires are increasingly seen as blight in San Francisco’s dense residential neighborhoods
  • PSPS exposure: Overhead infrastructure is the primary target of PG&E’s Public Safety Power Shutoff programs
  • Limited lifespan: Overhead service components (weatherheads, masts, service entrance cables) degrade faster in coastal SF’s salt air environment
SECTION 3

What Is Underground Electrical Service?

Underground electrical service delivers power through cables buried below ground in conduit, from the utility’s underground distribution system to your meter. In San Francisco, underground service is standard in newer neighborhoods, commercial districts, and any area that has undergone a PG&E Rule 20 undergrounding project.

How Underground Service Works

Rather than a service drop from a pole, underground service runs through conduit buried typically 18–24 inches below grade (deeper under streets and driveways). The conduit runs from PG&E’s underground distribution point — often a pad-mounted transformer or underground vault — through your property to the meter and service entrance. The homeowner’s electrician is responsible for the service lateral: the conduit and wiring from the property line (or transformer) to the meter.

Advantages of Underground Service in San Francisco

  • Weather resilience: Underground lines are fully protected from wind, rain, fog, falling trees, and storm damage
  • Wildfire safety: Eliminates the arc/contact ignition risk that makes overhead lines dangerous in fire-prone hillside areas
  • No PSPS exposure from overhead infrastructure: Underground laterals are not subject to the PG&E overhead shutoff programs that affect hillside neighborhoods
  • Longer service life: Well-installed underground conduit systems can last 40–60+ years vs. 20–30 for overhead components in SF’s coastal climate
  • Cleaner appearance: Eliminates the visual clutter of poles and wires — increasingly important in SF’s upscale residential market
  • Increased property value: Underground service is a premium feature in SF’s real estate market
  • Code compliance for future-proofing: New construction in SF requires underground service — if you’re adding an ADU or major addition, underground conversion may be required

Disadvantages of Underground Service in San Francisco

  • Higher upfront cost: Trenching, conduit, backfill, and restoration add $1,500–$5,000+ to the project cost
  • Longer installation timeline: Coordination with PG&E, permits, trenching, and inspections can extend the project to multiple days or weeks
  • Difficult fault location and repair: Buried faults require expensive equipment to locate and excavation to repair
  • Landscaping disruption: Trenching through driveways, concrete, or established gardens is destructive and adds restoration cost
  • Complex permitting: Underground conversions require city permits, SFPUC coordination, and utility approval in addition to standard electrical permits
SECTION 4

Full Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor Overhead Service Underground Service
Installation cost (Bay Area)$1,500 – $3,500$3,000 – $8,000+
Installation timeline1 day typical3–14 days (includes PG&E coordination)
Landscaping disruptionMinimalTrenching required
Weather resilienceVulnerable to wind/stormFully protected
Wildfire riskArc/contact risk in fire zonesNo overhead risk
PSPS outage exposureSubject to shutoff eventsReduced exposure
Fault detection & repairVisual, easy accessRequires equipment & excavation
Service life in SF climate20–30 years40–60+ years
Property value impactStandard/neutralPremium feature
Visual aestheticsPoles & wires visibleClean, unobtrusive
Required for new SF constructionNo (not permitted for new)Yes (code requirement)
Permit complexityStandard electrical permitElectrical + excavation + utility
HOA/neighborhood approvalMay requirePreferred by most HOAs
Compatible with 200A/400A upgradeYesYes
Salt air degradation risk (coastal SF)Higher (exposed hardware)Lower (conduit protection)
SECTION 5

Detailed Cost Breakdown for San Francisco Homeowners

Bay Area electrician rates and permit fees are among the highest in the country. Here’s a realistic breakdown of what each service type costs in San Francisco:

Overhead Service Upgrade

Panel + Overhead Entry

Electrical panel hardware (200A)$300 – $700
Weatherhead / riser replacement$150 – $400
Service entrance cable$200 – $500
Licensed C-10 electrician labor$800 – $1,500
SF/City permits & inspections$150 – $500
PG&E meter reconnection$0 – $200
Total Estimate$1,500 – $3,500
Underground Service Upgrade / Conversion

Panel + Underground Lateral

Electrical panel hardware (200A)$300 – $700
Underground conduit & wire$500 – $1,500
Trenching (per linear foot × distance)$500 – $3,000+
Concrete/asphalt sawcutting & restoration$300 – $1,500
Licensed C-10 electrician labor$1,000 – $2,000
SF/City permits, excavation + electrical$300 – $800
PG&E utility coordination & inspection$200 – $500
Total Estimate$3,000 – $8,000+

What Drives Underground Cost Variability

The biggest cost variable is trench length and surface type. A 20-foot trench through a soft lawn is $500–$800. The same 20 feet through concrete, a poured driveway, or under a patio slab can cost $2,000–$4,000 once sawcutting and restoration are included. Always get a site-specific quote — general cost estimates online are starting points, not final numbers for San Francisco’s varied property types.

Get At Least 3 Quotes

SF electrician rates vary significantly by contractor. Always get at least 3 quotes from licensed C-10 contractors who have experience with PG&E coordination. For underground conversions specifically, ask whether the contractor has completed Rule 20B/C projects or private undergroundings in SF — the utility coordination process is complex and experience matters.

SECTION 6

PG&E Rule 20 & San Francisco Undergrounding Requirements

California’s undergrounding policy is governed by PG&E Electric Rule 20, which sets the framework for when and how overhead utilities are converted to underground. Understanding Rule 20 is essential for any SF homeowner planning a service upgrade.

PG&E Electric Rule 20 — Key Framework

Three Pathways for Underground Conversion in SF

Rule 20A — Utility-Funded
Funded by PG&E/CPUC using ratepayer credits. Applies to streets with high public benefit — major arterials, high-traffic corridors. The utility funds the distribution side; property owners fund their lateral. No direct cost to homeowner for the street-side work.
Rule 20B — Developer-Funded
Required when developers build new projects that necessitate undergrounding. The developer funds the conversion of nearby overhead infrastructure. If your home is adjacent to a qualifying development, conversion may be triggered without your initiative.
Rule 20C — Private Conversion
Homeowner or property owner pays for a private undergrounding project. The homeowner funds both the distribution side (normally PG&E’s responsibility) and the service lateral. Most common for individual conversions not part of a larger district project.

San Francisco has also initiated its own undergrounding programs under PUC authority. Check your neighborhood’s status with the SF Department of Public Works and PG&E before planning a major project.

When Is Underground Service Required in San Francisco?

Underground service is not always optional in San Francisco. The following triggers may legally require underground conversion during a panel upgrade:

  • New construction or complete demolition/rebuild: All new SF construction must use underground service
  • Significant additions (adding an ADU, major square footage): May trigger underground conversion depending on the scope of work and permit type
  • Properties in undergrounding districts: If your block is part of an active Rule 20A district, conversion may be required during any major electrical work
  • Service lateral failure requiring replacement: If your existing underground lateral fails, PG&E may require upgrading to current standards
  • Increase in service capacity exceeding PG&E thresholds: Upgrading from 100A to 400A in certain underground districts may require full lateral replacement
Check Before You Upgrade

Before planning any panel upgrade in San Francisco, confirm with a licensed electrician whether your property is in an active undergrounding district or if your planned scope of work triggers a mandatory conversion. Discovering this mid-project can add weeks and thousands of dollars to your timeline and budget.

SECTION 7

San Francisco Neighborhoods: Service Type Breakdown

San Francisco’s electrical infrastructure reflects its varied history and terrain. Service types vary significantly by neighborhood:

Financial District / SOMA
Underground
Fully undergrounded commercial core; underground standard
Castro / Noe Valley
Mixed
Active undergrounding projects; many blocks converted or in progress
Sunset District
Overhead (Many)
Large residential grid; significant overhead infrastructure remains
Richmond District
Overhead (Many)
Similar to Sunset; active Rule 20A projects on select streets
Twin Peaks / Diamond Heights
Underground
Fire zone; undergrounding prioritized; mostly underground
Bernal Heights
Mixed
Hillside fire zone; conversion recommended; active projects
Pacific Heights / Pac Hts
Largely Underground
Premium neighborhood; most blocks converted; strong aesthetic driver
Mission District
Mixed
Redevelopment and density pushing underground adoption
Excelsior / Visitacion Valley
Overhead (Majority)
Lower-density residential; overhead remains prevalent
Potrero Hill
Mixed
Transitional; hillside portions pushing underground conversion
Marina / Cow Hollow
Largely Underground
Redeveloped after 1906 & 1989 quakes; underground standard
Bayview / Hunters Point
Overhead (Many)
Infrastructure investment ongoing; significant overhead remains

Note: This table reflects general patterns based on neighborhood development history and publicly available infrastructure data. Your specific block may differ. Confirm your service type and district status with PG&E or a licensed electrician before planning a project.

SECTION 8

Wildfire Zones, PSPS Risk & Underground Service

For San Francisco homeowners in or near the High Fire Threat Districts, the underground vs. overhead question takes on an additional dimension: safety and outage resilience.

🔥 San Francisco Has High Fire Threat Districts (HFTD)

The California Public Utilities Commission designates parts of San Francisco — particularly the western hills, Twin Peaks, Bernal Heights, and surrounding elevated neighborhoods — as Tier 2 or Tier 3 High Fire Threat Districts. Overhead electrical infrastructure in these zones is a documented ignition risk, and is subject to PG&E’s proactive hardening programs, including undergrounding priorities.

How Underground Service Reduces Fire and Outage Risk

  • Eliminates contact risk: Trees, wind-blown debris, and construction equipment cannot contact underground lines the way they can overhead wires
  • No wind-induced conductor contact: High-wind events that cause overhead lines to touch — a key PG&E ignition scenario — cannot occur underground
  • PSPS scope reduction: PG&E’s Public Safety Power Shutoffs target overhead distribution circuits in fire risk areas. Homes served by underground laterals in areas where the distribution grid is also underground are largely exempt from PSPS events
  • Battery backup compatibility: Underground service is more compatible with the kind of whole-home battery backup systems (Powerwall, Enphase) that allow islanding during PSPS events — because you can disconnect cleanly from a reliable underground feed

🏔️ Hillside SF Homeowner: The Fire Zone Calculus

HFTD Tier 2/3
Designated SF hillside fire risk zone
Overhead = Risk
Arc/contact ignition risk at your service entrance
2–5/yr
Potential PSPS outage days affecting overhead infrastructure
$5K–$8K
Underground conversion cost in hillside SF
$10K–$25K
Wildfire mitigation value (insurance/damage avoidance)
Strong ROI
For hillside HFTD properties with overhead service
SECTION 9

Permit & Utility Coordination Process in San Francisco

Understanding the process before you start prevents costly delays. Here’s what to expect for each service type:

Overhead Service Upgrade — Process Overview

Step 1: Electrician Assessment & Quote (1–3 days)
Licensed C-10 electrician assesses your current panel, service entrance, and weatherhead condition. Quote includes panel hardware, labor, and permit fees.
Step 2: SF DBI Electrical Permit (3–10 business days)
Your electrician pulls an electrical permit from the SF Department of Building Inspection. Over-the-counter permits are available for standard panel upgrades; more complex work may require plan check.
Step 3: PG&E Meter Disconnect Scheduling (1–5 business days)
PG&E must disconnect and reconnect the meter. Scheduling varies; confirm timing before your installation date.
Step 4: Installation Day (1 day)
Electrician replaces panel, weatherhead, service entrance cable, and any associated components. PG&E reconnects meter same day or next day.
Step 5: Final Inspection (2–5 business days)
SF DBI inspector visits to verify code compliance. Once signed off, the project is complete and the permit is closed.

Underground Service Upgrade/Conversion — Process Overview

Step 1: PG&E Pre-Application & Service Lateral Design (1–3 weeks)
Your electrician submits a PG&E service application. PG&E reviews and approves the underground service lateral design, specifying conduit size, route, and trench requirements. This step alone can take 1–3 weeks.
Step 2: SF DBI Electrical + Excavation Permits (1–2 weeks)
Dual permits required: an electrical permit from SF DBI and an excavation/encroachment permit if trenching crosses public sidewalk or street. Allow 1–2 weeks for permit issuance.
Step 3: 811 Utility Marking (3 business days minimum)
California law requires 811 “Call Before You Dig” notifications at least 3 business days before any excavation. All underground utilities on the property are marked.
Step 4: Trenching & Conduit Installation (1–3 days)
Crew excavates the trench route, installs conduit, pulls wire, and backfills. Surface restoration (concrete, asphalt, landscaping) follows.
Step 5: PG&E Pull-Through & Connection (Scheduled)
PG&E schedules a crew to pull the service conductors through your conduit and connect to their distribution system. This is often the longest scheduling wait — 1–4 weeks depending on PG&E workload.
Step 6: Panel Installation & Final Inspection (1–2 days)
Electrician installs the panel, makes connections, and calls for SF DBI final inspection. PG&E reconnects the meter once inspection is passed.
Total Underground Timeline: 4–10 Weeks

Don’t plan an underground service upgrade on a tight deadline. The PG&E coordination, permit processing, utility marking, and scheduling windows routinely make underground conversions a 4–10 week project from start to energization. Plan accordingly — especially if you’re coordinating with a solar, EV charger, or ADU installation.

SECTION 10

When Is Each Option the Right Choice?

🔥🏔️
Hillside SF in Fire Zone
↓ Underground: Clear Priority

HFTD designation, PSPS risk, and PG&E hardening programs make underground conversion the right call. The cost premium is justified by fire safety and outage resilience alone.

🏗️🏡
New Construction or ADU
↓ Underground: Required

San Francisco code requires underground service for new construction and most major additions. No choice here — plan it into your project budget from day one.

🔌⚡
Panel Upgrade, Flat Neighborhood, No Solar/EV Plans
→ Overhead: Cost-Effective

If your current service is overhead, your block isn’t in an undergrounding district, and you have no near-term plans for solar or EV, an overhead upgrade is code-compliant and cost-effective.

☀️🚗🔋
Adding Solar + EV + Battery
↓ Underground: Strong Case

A whole-home electrification project is the ideal time to bundle an underground conversion. One trench, one PG&E coordination, one final inspection — bundle savings can reduce the premium to $1,500–$2,500 incremental cost.

💰🏠
Selling Within 2–3 Years
⚡ Consider ROI Carefully

Underground service is a premium feature in SF’s market. But whether the cost recovers at sale depends heavily on your neighborhood and buyer pool. Consult a real estate agent before spending $5K+ on conversion for resale purposes alone.

🏢🏘️
Undergrounding District Participation
↓ Underground: Leverage the Timing

If your block is part of a Rule 20A project, PG&E funds the distribution side. Your cost is only the service lateral — making this the cheapest window to convert. Don’t miss it.

↓ Choose Underground Service If…

  • You’re in a hillside SF neighborhood with fire risk
  • You’re doing new construction or a major addition/ADU
  • Your block is part of an active Rule 20A undergrounding district
  • You’re bundling with solar, EV charger, or battery installation
  • You value long-term reliability over upfront cost
  • Aesthetics matter (no poles/wires)
  • Your existing overhead service components are aging/failing

→ Keep Overhead Service If…

  • You’re in a flat SF neighborhood with no fire zone designation
  • Your current overhead service is functioning well
  • Budget constraints make the $3,000+ premium prohibitive
  • Your block has no active undergrounding district or requirement
  • You need the upgrade done quickly (1–2 days vs. 4–10 weeks)
SECTION 11

How to Convert Overhead to Underground Service in San Francisco

If you’ve decided to convert, here’s what the process looks like in practical terms for a San Francisco homeowner:

1. Start with a Licensed C-10 Electrician Assessment

Before anything else, have a licensed C-10 contractor assess your property. They’ll determine the optimal trench route, identify any obstacles (existing utilities, concrete, slope), estimate the lateral length from the PG&E connection point to your meter, and provide a realistic cost and timeline estimate.

2. Submit a PG&E Service Application

Your electrician submits a PG&E Electric Service Application on your behalf. This is a formal utility coordination request. PG&E will specify the conduit type, size, burial depth, and route requirements for your property. PG&E’s approval is required before any excavation begins on the utility-side conduit path.

3. Obtain Required Permits

An underground service conversion in SF requires:

  • SF DBI Electrical Permit: For the panel upgrade and service entrance work
  • SF DBI Excavation/Encroachment Permit: If trenching crosses a public sidewalk, street, or right-of-way
  • 811 Utility Notification: Minimum 3 business days before any digging

4. Trench, Install Conduit, and Backfill

Your electrician’s crew (or a licensed excavation subcontractor) excavates the trench to PG&E-specified depth (typically 24–36 inches under driveways, 18 inches under landscaping). Schedule conduit is installed, and the trench is backfilled and compacted. Surface restoration follows immediately.

5. PG&E Pulls the Service Conductors

Once your conduit is inspected and accepted by PG&E, a PG&E crew pulls the service conductors through your conduit from the transformer or distribution point to your meter socket. Scheduling this PG&E work is typically the longest wait in the process.

6. Panel Installation, Inspection, and Energization

With the underground feed in place, your electrician installs or upgrades the panel, makes all connections, and calls for the SF DBI final inspection. Upon passing inspection, PG&E sets the meter and energizes the new underground service.

💡 Bundle for Maximum Savings

The single best way to reduce the cost premium of underground service is to bundle it with another major project — solar installation, EV charger, battery storage, or an ADU. One trench serves all. One PG&E application covers all. One final inspection covers all. Bundling can reduce the incremental underground conversion cost by 30–50% compared to doing it as a standalone project later.

GridSync Expertise

Underground & Overhead Service Upgrades Across the Bay Area Peninsula

GridSync specializes in both underground and overhead electrical service upgrades, PG&E applicant design, and whole-home electrification for Bay Area homes. Our licensed C-10 electricians manage everything from PG&E coordination to SF permits to final inspection — and we’ll help you navigate every undergrounding rule and requirement specific to your address.

Underground Service ConversionsFull PG&E coordination, permitting, trenching, conduit, panel installation, and restoration.
Overhead Panel UpgradesFast, code-compliant overhead service upgrades with same-day installation where possible.
PG&E Applicant DesignWe prepare engineered PG&E service applications for residential and commercial projects.
Solar + EV + Battery BundlingBundle your service upgrade with solar, storage, and EV charging for maximum savings.
Fire Zone AssessmentsWe assess HFTD risk and advise on underground conversion priority for hillside SF properties.
Permit & Inspection HandledWe manage all SF DBI permits, PG&E coordination, and 811 notifications from start to finish.
SECTION 12

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my SF home has overhead or underground electrical service?

Check your meter panel: if wires run upward from the top of your meter to a riser and then attach to a utility pole via a service drop, you have overhead service. If conduit exits from the bottom or side of your meter going into the ground with no overhead wires connected, you have underground service. Still unsure? A licensed electrician can confirm in minutes during a free assessment.

Does San Francisco require underground service for panel upgrades?

Not for all upgrades. A straightforward like-for-like panel replacement on an existing overhead service generally does not require conversion to underground. However, new construction, major additions, ADUs, and significant capacity increases may trigger underground requirements depending on the scope and your neighborhood’s undergrounding district status. Always confirm with a licensed contractor before assuming no change is required.

What is PG&E’s role in an underground service conversion?

PG&E is responsible for the distribution side of your electrical service — the lines from their transformer to your property line (or to the meter, depending on the configuration). During an underground conversion, PG&E must approve the conduit design, install or pull the service conductors through your conduit, and set the meter. The homeowner’s electrician handles everything on the property side: the conduit, the trench, the panel, and all interior work. Coordinating with PG&E is required and managed by your electrician.

How long does an overhead to underground conversion take in San Francisco?

Plan for 4–10 weeks from start to energization. The longest waits are typically PG&E service application approval (1–3 weeks) and PG&E crew scheduling to pull conductors (1–4 weeks). Physical work — trenching, conduit, panel installation — usually takes 2–4 days of actual on-site labor. Don’t start the process if you need power restored on a tight deadline.

Can I get financial assistance for underground conversion in San Francisco?

Potentially. If your block is part of a PG&E Rule 20A undergrounding district, PG&E’s ratepayer allocation funding covers the distribution-side conversion cost — you only pay for your service lateral. For income-qualified homeowners, SF’s various utility assistance programs and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District’s grants may also help offset upgrade costs. Ask your electrician and check with PG&E directly for your address’s eligibility.

Is underground service always more reliable than overhead?

For weather-related outages, yes — underground lines are far less susceptible to wind, rain, and fallen tree damage. However, underground faults (cable insulation failure, dig-ins, water intrusion) are more difficult and expensive to locate and repair than overhead faults. In practice, underground systems in San Francisco experience fewer outage events but each outage event, when it does occur, takes longer to restore. For most SF homeowners, the tradeoff clearly favors underground.

Does underground service help with wildfire insurance in San Francisco?

Potentially, yes. Some insurers and programs that assess wildfire risk may view underground electrical service favorably in fire threat districts, as it eliminates one ignition pathway. This varies significantly by insurer and policy. We recommend consulting directly with your homeowners insurance provider about whether underground conversion affects your coverage or premium — but do not rely on insurance savings as the primary financial justification for the conversion cost.

Conclusion: Making the Right Call for Your SF Home

The choice between underground and overhead service in San Francisco isn’t one-size-fits-all. For flat-neighborhood homeowners doing a straightforward panel replacement, overhead is cost-effective and fully code-compliant. For hillside residents in fire zones, anyone building new, or homeowners bundling with solar and EV charging, underground is the clear long-term investment — safer, more durable, and increasingly required by code.

The key is knowing your neighborhood’s undergrounding district status, understanding your PG&E service configuration, and working with a licensed C-10 contractor who has real experience navigating San Francisco’s unique utility coordination requirements. The right installer doesn’t just do the work — they help you avoid the expensive surprises that come from discovering a mandatory underground conversion requirement mid-project.

Related Reading:

GridSync’s team specializes in residential and light-commercial electrical service upgrades, underground conversions, PG&E applicant design, solar integration, and EV charging in San Francisco, Menlo Park, Palo Alto, Mountain View, Los Altos, and the entire Bay Area Peninsula. All work is performed by licensed C-10 electricians and is fully permitted and code-compliant.

Ready to Upgrade Your Electrical Service in San Francisco?

Get a free, no-obligation consultation from GridSync’s licensed electricians. We’ll assess your service type, confirm any undergrounding requirements, and give you a complete quote for overhead or underground upgrade — with full PG&E coordination included.

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