Do I Need a Separate Meter for My SF ADU?
No — a separate utility meter is not legally required for most San Francisco ADUs. For attached ADUs, you have three choices: separate meter, submetering, or shared service. However, PG&E does require a second electric meter for detached ADUs (converted garages, backyard cottages). Even when optional, a separate meter is often the smarter long-term investment if you plan to rent the unit. Expect to pay $2,000–$5,000 for a separate meter, $400–$1,200 for submetering, or $0 extra for shared service — each with different cost and management tradeoffs.
Adding an ADU to your San Francisco property is one of the most effective ways to generate rental income, house extended family, or increase your home’s long-term value. But once the planning and design excitement fades, utility setup questions become very real — and surprisingly complex.
The meter question is at the center of it all. Get it wrong and you’ll either overpay in construction costs, underpay upfront and deal with billing headaches for years, or discover mid-project that PG&E requires something your electrician didn’t plan for. This guide covers everything SF homeowners need to know about ADU meter requirements, costs, and tradeoffs.
San Francisco’s dense lots, older electrical infrastructure, and PG&E’s specific service rules create a unique set of constraints compared to suburban Bay Area cities. Always verify current requirements with SF DBI, SFPUC, and PG&E directly — regulations update regularly under California’s ADU streamlining laws.
Your 3 Utility Setup Options Explained
When you add an ADU in San Francisco, you have three fundamental options for how to handle electricity (and by extension, other utilities). Understanding these is the foundation of every other decision:
The ADU has its own PG&E account and meter. Tenant pays their bill directly to PG&E. Owner has zero billing involvement after setup.
- ✓ Clean tenant billing — no landlord involvement
- ✓ Encourages energy conservation
- ✓ Best for long-term rentals & resale
- ✓ Required by PG&E for detached ADUs
- ✗ Highest upfront cost
- ✗ Requires PG&E coordination (4–10 weeks)
One main PG&E meter, but a landlord-owned submeter tracks the ADU’s electricity use. Landlord bills tenant monthly based on submeter readings.
- ✓ Lower upfront cost than separate meter
- ✓ Tenant pays for actual usage
- ✓ Good for family ADUs or short-term rentals
- ✗ Landlord must manage monthly billing
- ✗ PG&E’s tiered rates apply to combined usage
- ✗ More administrative work
ADU connects to the existing electrical system. One PG&E bill covers both units. Utility costs folded into rent or split informally.
- ✓ No extra installation cost
- ✓ Simplest setup — no separate metering
- ✓ Fine for family use or owner-occupied ADUs
- ✗ No visibility into ADU-specific usage
- ✗ Combined usage can push you into higher PG&E rate tiers
- ✗ Harder to rent out professionally
Attached vs. Detached ADU: The Rules Are Different
One of the most important facts that many SF ADU guides miss: whether your ADU is attached or detached significantly changes what PG&E requires. This is not a city code issue — it’s a utility rule, and failing to account for it early can derail your project timeline.
| ADU Type | Description | Separate Meter Required? | Typical Electrical Connection | PG&E Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interior ADU | Converted existing space inside main home (basement, ground floor) | Optional | Fed from main panel via new subpanel | Panel upgrade usually required |
| Attached ADU | Addition to or expansion of the main home structure | Optional | Subpanel from main service | Panel upgrade likely; may need service upgrade |
| Above-Garage ADU | New living unit built atop an existing attached garage | Optional | Subpanel from main; sprinklers may require water upgrade | Panel upgrade typically required |
| Detached ADU (New Build) | Separate backyard cottage or new structure | Required by PG&E | Separate service from utility pole or underground lateral | Separate account; trenching & metering costs |
| Converted Detached Garage | Detached garage converted to living space | Required by PG&E | New service run; existing wiring likely insufficient | Separate account; full electrical upgrade needed |
| Junior ADU (JADU) | Up to 500 sq ft within existing home; shares some facilities | Optional | Typically shares main service | Panel review; full upgrade rare |
PG&E requires a second electric meter for any ADU located in a separate, detached building — including converted detached garages and backyard cottages. This is not optional and must be planned for in your budget and construction timeline. The $1,500 PG&E engineering fee applies on top of all installation costs.
PG&E Requirements & the $1,500 Engineering Fee
Many SF homeowners are blindsided mid-project by PG&E’s requirements and fees. Understanding them in advance is critical for realistic budgeting and timeline planning.
The $1,500 PG&E Engineering Fee
When any electrical upgrade to your home requires PG&E involvement — a new meter, a service upgrade, a new service connection for a detached ADU — PG&E charges a $1,500 engineering fee to begin the review and planning process. This fee is charged before any physical work begins and is non-refundable. Additional fees may be assessed depending on the size and condition of existing electrical infrastructure running to your property.
⚡ PG&E Coordination: What to Expect
PG&E’s process for meter additions and service upgrades involves multiple departments and significant lead time. Plan accordingly:
- Initial application: Submit service request — $1,500 engineering fee due at this stage
- Engineering review: PG&E assesses your property’s existing infrastructure (2–4 weeks)
- Additional fees: Possible extra charges depending on transformer capacity, underground conduit needs, or distance from the main
- Scheduling: PG&E work orders can take 4–10 weeks to execute in SF — sometimes longer
- Temporary shutdown: Your main power will be shut off briefly during the final connection — coordinate with residents
- Inspection: SF DBI electrical inspection required before PG&E will energize the new meter
Contact PG&E at the very beginning of your ADU planning — not after permits are issued. PG&E’s review timeline is completely separate from the city’s permit process, and delays on their end are one of the most common reasons SF ADU projects run over schedule. Your licensed electrician should help coordinate this.
Cost Breakdown: All Three Options
Here’s a realistic cost breakdown for each utility setup option in San Francisco, including all the fees that often surprise homeowners:
Separate Meter
Submetering
Shared Service
The Hidden Cost of Shared Service: PG&E Rate Tiers
PG&E charges progressively higher rates as your monthly usage increases. If your main home already uses 600 kWh/month and your ADU adds another 300–500 kWh, you may jump from Tier 1 pricing (~$0.29/kWh) into Tier 2 or above (~$0.40+/kWh) — meaning your entire combined usage costs more. Over a year, this tier bleed-through can add $600–$1,200 to your combined bill compared to having the ADU on its own separate account.
Panel Upgrade: What Almost Every SF ADU Needs
Regardless of which meter option you choose, there’s one near-universal requirement for SF ADU projects: a main electrical panel upgrade. Most San Francisco homes were built with 100A service — completely inadequate for a home plus an ADU, especially one with modern appliances, an EV charger, or a heat pump.
Typical ADU Panel Requirements
- Minimum 200A main panel — this is the standard recommendation for a primary home plus any ADU configuration
- Dedicated ADU subpanel — typically 60A–100A to serve the ADU’s circuits independently
- Separate 240V circuits — for HVAC, water heater, and EV charging (if planned)
- GFCI/AFCI breakers — required by current NEC code in kitchens, baths, and outdoor locations
⚡ Typical SF ADU Electrical Upgrade Budget
If you’re already upgrading to a 200A panel for your ADU, this is the ideal moment to consider a smart electrical panel like Span or Leviton. The incremental cost is modest when bundled with the panel upgrade, and the load management features are especially valuable for ADU configurations where you need to balance multiple units’ power usage.
Water, Sewer & Gas: Beyond Electricity
Utility setup for an SF ADU isn’t just about electricity. Water, sewer, and gas all require attention — and in some cases, mandatory upgrades that can significantly impact your project budget.
Most ADUs can share the existing water lateral from the main home. However, if your ADU will require sprinklers (common for ADUs above garages), you may need a larger water service line. ADUs over 750 sq ft may require an independent water connection. Contact SFPUC for your property’s specific capacity.
The biggest potential budget surprise. SF requires a minimum 4″ sewer lateral for any property with an ADU. If your existing lateral is 3″ (common in older SF homes), you may need to replace the full lateral to the street — one of the most expensive utility upgrades in the Bay Area given street excavation costs.
If your ADU will have gas appliances, you’ll need a gas line extension from the main. Given California’s all-electric building trend and SF’s prohibition on new gas connections in some contexts, many ADU owners are going fully electric instead. Verify current SF building codes — new ADUs may be required to be all-electric.
ADUs require their own heating system (a dedicated thermostat in the main house doesn’t count). Mini-split heat pumps are the most popular SF ADU choice — efficient, all-electric, and no ductwork needed. Factor in a dedicated 240V circuit in your panel planning.
ADUs need their own water heater — you can’t share the main home’s unit. Tankless electric water heaters are popular for space-constrained SF ADUs. Heat pump water heaters are more efficient but require more space. Both need dedicated electrical circuits.
If you’re already doing major electrical work for the ADU, this is a good time to rough in conduit for EV charging — for yourself, or as a premium amenity for renters. Adding EV capability later costs significantly more than planning for it during initial construction.
SF’s sewer lateral requirements are often the most expensive and time-consuming part of an ADU utility upgrade. Have a licensed plumber camera-inspect your existing lateral before finalizing your ADU budget — discovering a required 4″ upgrade mid-project can add $10,000–$20,000 and weeks of delay. SF DPW and SFPUC have specific requirements; contact them early.
Which Option Is Right for You? Real SF Scenarios
Clean tenant billing, no monthly management, higher resale value, and tenants naturally conserve energy. Worth the $2,000–$5,000 upfront cost over a 10+ year rental.
When there’s no formal landlord-tenant relationship, shared service or submetering keeps things simple. Upgrade later if the situation changes.
PG&E requires it — no choice. Budget $2,000–$5,000 for metering plus trenching costs for the service run to the detached structure.
PG&E requires a second meter. Existing garage wiring is almost always insufficient — budget for full electrical upgrade inside the conversion too.
A separately metered ADU is far more attractive to buyers — it signals a clean, investor-ready rental. Commands a premium in SF’s ADU market.
A JADU within your existing home can reasonably share service. Submetering gives you usage visibility without the cost and lead time of a full separate meter.
✓ Get a Separate Meter If…
- You have a detached ADU (required by PG&E)
- You plan to rent to a non-family tenant
- You want to maximize future resale value
- You plan to hold the property long-term
- Your ADU will have high energy use (EV, heat pump, full kitchen)
- You want zero billing involvement as a landlord
- You’re doing it anyway for the panel upgrade — incremental cost is lower
→ Submetering or Shared May Suffice If…
- Your ADU is for immediate family (no formal tenancy)
- You’re working with a very tight ADU budget
- You have an attached or interior ADU (not detached)
- You want to defer the cost and upgrade later
- Your ADU will have low energy consumption
Impact on Resale Value & Rental Income
The meter decision isn’t just operational — it has real financial implications for your property’s value and your rental income potential.
Resale Value
In San Francisco’s competitive real estate market, a separately metered ADU is a meaningfully differentiated listing. Buyers — especially investors and multigenerational families — see a separate meter as evidence the property is professionally configured for rental income. Agents consistently report that separately metered ADU properties sell faster and at higher prices than equivalent properties with shared utility setups.
Rental Income Considerations
A separate meter typically allows you to rent at market rate without including utilities, while a shared or submetered setup may require bundling utilities into rent. In SF where average ADU rents run $1,800–$3,500/month, utilities represent a meaningful cost differential. Consider this: if your ADU tenant uses $150/month in electricity that you’re absorbing into rent, that’s $1,800/year — enough to offset a significant portion of the separate meter’s installation cost in year one.
| Metric | Separate Meter | Submetering | Shared Service |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upfront installation cost | $2,000 – $5,000 | $400 – $1,200 | $0 |
| Monthly landlord effort | None | Read meter + bill tenant | None (utilities in rent) |
| Tenant utility exposure | Tenant pays PG&E directly | Tenant pays landlord for usage | Included in rent (owner’s risk) |
| PG&E rate tier risk | None — separate accounts | Moderate — combined usage | High — combined usage |
| Impact on resale value | ✓ Strong positive | ⚡ Modest positive | ✗ Minimal |
| Ease of tenant turnover | Simple — tenant opens PG&E account | Moderate — coordinate submeter read | Simple — utilities in rent |
| Best for ADU type | Detached, long-term rental, investment | Attached, family, short-term rental | Family, JADU, low-use situations |
Step-by-Step: How to Set Up Your SF ADU Utilities
Here’s the practical sequence for navigating SF ADU utility setup from start to finish. The order matters — skipping steps or doing them out of sequence is one of the most common causes of delays.
SF ADU Electrical Service — From Panel to Permit
GridSync specializes in ADU electrical service for San Francisco and the Bay Area Peninsula. Our licensed C-10 electricians manage every aspect — from initial load assessment through PG&E coordination, permits, inspection, and energization.
Common Mistakes SF ADU Owners Make with Utility Setup
| Mistake | What Goes Wrong | How to Avoid It |
|---|---|---|
| Assuming shared service is always fine | Combined PG&E usage pushes you into higher rate tiers; billing disputes with tenants | Model your combined energy usage before deciding; factor in rate tier impact |
| Not contacting PG&E early enough | 4–10 week PG&E scheduling delays construction completion and occupancy | Submit PG&E service request as soon as permits are in review — not after approval |
| Skipping the sewer lateral inspection | Discover mid-project that a $10,000–$20,000 lateral replacement is required | Camera inspect your sewer lateral before finalizing your ADU budget |
| Underestimating panel capacity needs | Adding EV charger or heat pump later requires another panel upgrade | Upgrade to 200A minimum and plan for future loads during initial project |
| Forgetting about the $1,500 PG&E engineering fee | Budget surprise; delays if fee isn’t paid promptly | Include this in your initial ADU budget from day one |
| Not running conduit for future EV charging | Expensive retrofit later; need to open walls or run exterior conduit | Ask electrician to rough in EV conduit during ADU electrical work — minimal extra cost |
| Using unlicensed electricians to save money | Unpermitted work; PG&E won’t connect; sale complications; safety hazard | Always use a licensed C-10 contractor for all electrical work in SF |
| Ignoring SF’s all-electric building trend | Install gas lines that may be prohibited; complicated retrofit later | Verify current SF building codes — new ADUs may need to be all-electric; plan accordingly |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a separate meter required for all SF ADUs?
No. A separate meter is required by PG&E for detached ADUs and converted detached garages. For attached ADUs, interior conversions, above-garage ADUs, and JADUs, a separate meter is optional — you can choose between separate metering, submetering, or shared service based on your needs and budget.
How long does it take to get a separate meter installed in SF?
Plan on 6–14 weeks from initial PG&E application to energization. This includes PG&E’s engineering review (2–4 weeks), scheduling of utility crew work (4–8 weeks), and SF DBI electrical inspection. The city permit and PG&E processes run in parallel but both must complete before the meter is energized.
Can my ADU tenant set up their own PG&E account with a shared meter?
No. PG&E accounts are tied to the meter, not the dwelling unit. If there’s only one meter for your property, there’s only one PG&E account — owned by the property owner. The tenant cannot have a separate PG&E account without a separate meter. This is why separate metering is valuable for arms-length rentals.
What is submetering and is it legal in San Francisco?
Submetering means installing a landlord-owned secondary meter on the ADU’s electrical circuit to track its consumption separately from the main home. It is legal in California and San Francisco, but you must bill the tenant at rates no higher than what PG&E charges (you cannot mark up utility costs). California law requires specific disclosure practices for landlords who use submetering.
Does my ADU sewer lateral have to be 4 inches?
In most SF ADU cases, yes. San Francisco requires a minimum 4″ sewer lateral for properties with an ADU. If your current lateral is 3″ (common in pre-1980 SF homes), you will likely need to replace it from your home to the street connection — a major cost item that can run $5,000–$20,000+ depending on depth and street conditions. Have it inspected before finalizing your ADU budget.
Do I need a separate water meter for my SF ADU?
Generally no — most SF ADUs can share the existing water service. However, ADUs over 750 sq ft, ADUs requiring fire sprinklers (such as units above garages), or ADUs adding significant plumbing load may trigger a water service upgrade requirement. Contact SFPUC early in your design process to confirm requirements for your specific property.
What happens to my PG&E rate tiers if I add an ADU on a shared meter?
PG&E uses tiered pricing where electricity gets more expensive as your monthly usage increases. Adding an ADU on a shared meter means your combined usage is higher, potentially pushing you from Tier 1 (~$0.29/kWh) into Tier 2 or higher (~$0.40/kWh). This “tier bleed” applies to your entire consumption — not just the ADU portion — potentially adding $600–$1,500/year to your combined bills over time.
Is this a good time to install a smart panel for my ADU project?
Yes — if you’re already doing a major panel upgrade for your ADU, this is the lowest-cost window to upgrade to a smart panel. The incremental cost drops significantly when bundled with an existing panel replacement project. See our full smart panel vs. traditional panel guide for Bay Area homes.
Conclusion: The SF ADU Meter Decision
For most SF homeowners, the right answer on ADU metering comes down to your ADU type and your rental intentions. If you have a detached ADU, the decision is already made for you — PG&E requires a second meter. If your ADU is attached, the choice between separate meter, submetering, and shared service is a genuine financial decision worth thinking through carefully.
Long-term rental investors and homeowners planning to sell within 5–10 years will almost always benefit from a separate meter — it pays back through cleaner tenant relationships, avoided rate tier costs, and resale premium. Family ADUs and short-term or low-use situations may be well served by submetering or shared service.
Whatever you choose, work with a licensed C-10 electrician who understands PG&E’s specific requirements, SF’s permit process, and the current building code landscape. Contact PG&E early, inspect your sewer lateral before budgeting, and plan for a 200A panel if you don’t already have one. The utility setup decisions you make now will shape your ADU’s costs, rental income, and marketability for decades.
Related Reading:
- Smart Panel vs. Traditional Panel: Is It Worth It for a Bay Area Home?
- 200-Amp Electrical Service: Everything You Need to Know
- Electrical Service Upgrade Requirements
- Solar + Battery Storage Installation Guide
- Electrical Service Upgrade Cost Breakdown
- Installing Battery Storage Systems
GridSync’s team specializes in residential electrical panel upgrades, ADU electrical service, and whole-home electrification across 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.
Planning an ADU in San Francisco? Get the Electrical Right From the Start.
GridSync’s licensed electricians specialize in SF ADU utility setup — from 200A panel upgrades to PG&E meter coordination and submetering installation. We’ll help you choose the right option for your ADU, manage every permit, and maximize your project’s value.
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Bringing hands-on experience in electrical installation and system design, specializing in residential and light-commercial projects. The team focuses on delivering safe, code-compliant solutions for electrical panel upgrades, backup power systems, and modern electrical infrastructure.
With deep experience navigating complex permitting and inspection requirements particularly in highly regulated regions like California Team GridSync.pro emphasizes accurate load calculations, long-term reliability, and safety-first execution. They work closely with homeowners, contractors, and property managers to ensure every installation meets current electrical codes and performs reliably in real-world conditions.
Through their writing, Team GridSync.pro breaks down technical electrical topics into clear, practical guidance, helping readers make informed decisions about electrical upgrades, system planning, and compliance requirements.