Copper wiring and electrical tools in the foreground with an electrician working on a modern electrical panel in the background, illustrating rising electrical system costs.

Why Electrical Work Is Getting More Expensive — And Why It’s Not Slowing Down

Copper wiring and electrical tools in the foreground with an electrician working on a modern electrical panel in the background, illustrating rising electrical system costs.

Electrical costs are rising, and copper is one of the main reasons why. Most people assume higher electrical costs are temporary.


That once things “settle down,” prices will come back to earth.

That’s not what’s happening.

Electrical work is getting more expensive for a simple reason: the materials behind it — especially copper — are in permanent demand, and supply isn’t keeping up.

This isn’t a short-term spike.
It’s a structural change in how power is built, delivered, and upgraded.


Copper: the backbone of everything electrical

Copper isn’t optional in electrical work.

It’s in:

  • Electrical panels
  • Service upgrades
  • EV chargers
  • Commercial builds
  • Condo towers
  • Data centres
  • Grid upgrades

When copper costs more, electrical work costs more.
There’s no workaround. No substitute.

And right now, copper demand is exploding.


Why this time is different

We’ve seen material price increases before.
This one is different — and it’s not slowing down.

Electrification is no longer optional

Electric vehicles, heat pumps, grid upgrades, and energy-hungry buildings all require far more copper than older systems ever did. An electric vehicle alone uses several times more copper than a gas-powered one.

That demand isn’t cyclical. It’s policy-driven and permanent.

Supply can’t catch up

New copper mines take years — often decades — to develop.
On top of that, ore quality is declining and many major suppliers face political, environmental, and permitting delays.

Even when prices rise, supply doesn’t respond quickly.

Infrastructure is aging

Much of North America’s electrical infrastructure was built for a world that used far less power. Modern loads are exposing limits that didn’t matter 30 or 40 years ago.

Upgrades are no longer optional — they’re unavoidable.


What this means for homeowners

If your home needs:

  • A panel upgrade
  • An EV charger
  • A service upgrade
  • Electrical modernization

Waiting rarely saves money anymore.

Material costs continue to rise, and electrical work is becoming more complex — not simpler. Older homes, in particular, often require more copper and more labour to meet today’s demands.

This isn’t pressure. It’s just reality.


What this means for businesses and property owners

For commercial and multi-unit properties, the impact is even bigger.

We’re seeing:

  • Shorter quote validity windows
  • Material price volatility
  • Longer lead times
  • Higher costs to retrofit later instead of planning early

The biggest risk today usually isn’t labour.
It’s materials you didn’t lock in and capacity you didn’t plan for.


Why planning early matters more than ever

The smartest electrical projects right now aren’t rushed — they’re planned.

That means:

  • Proper load calculations
  • Designing for future expansion
  • Avoiding rework when prices rise again
  • Building systems that won’t need immediate upgrades

Good planning doesn’t just save money.
It reduces surprises.


The bottom line

Copper prices are sending a clear message.

Electrical infrastructure is becoming more valuable — not less.
And the cost of waiting is rising faster than most people realize.

If you’re thinking about an upgrade, expansion, or future-proofing your electrical system, the best time to understand your options is before you’re forced into a decision.

The goal isn’t to rush.
It’s to be ready.

Canadian Mining Report

The Hidden Costs of Delaying Electrical Upgrades in Commercial Buildings

Every business depends on reliable power, and delaying commercial electrical upgrades Ottawa buildings need can quietly cost far more than many owners realize.

In today’s fast-paced commercial world, reliability and efficiency aren’t luxuries—they’re lifelines. Yet many building owners and property managers put off electrical upgrades until a failure forces their hand.

At TYFAR Electric Inc., we have seen firsthand how delaying necessary improvements can quietly drain profits, reduce safety, and limit business growth.


1. The Cost of Downtime

When an aging electrical system fails, productivity stops. Even a short outage can lead to missed deadlines, spoiled materials, or idle staff.

For Ottawa businesses running on tight schedules, unplanned downtime often costs far more than a proactive upgrade ever would.


2. Energy Inefficiency Adds Up

Outdated lighting, motors, and distribution panels consume more energy than modern, code-compliant systems.

For example, replacing old ballasts, wiring, or panels can drastically lower monthly utility bills. With energy prices rising across Ontario, efficiency upgrades often pay back faster than most realize.


3. Safety and Liability Risks

Old electrical systems pose hidden dangers. Overheating circuits, worn insulation, and outdated breakers can all create fire or shock hazards.

A single electrical incident could lead to equipment loss, insurance claims, or even business interruption. Upgrading to current code helps protect both people and property.


4. Reduced Property Value

Buyers and tenants look for modern, safe, and efficient buildings.

However, a dated electrical infrastructure can lower your building’s market value or turn away prospective tenants—especially those needing reliable power for technology, machinery, or EV charging.


How TYFAR Electric Helps You Stay Ahead

Our commercial team designs and installs upgrades that future-proof your building—whether that means modernizing panels, adding electrical capacity, improving lighting, or preparing for EV infrastructure.

We work around your schedule, minimize disruption, and ensure every project meets or exceeds ESA and Ontario Building Code standards.


Ready to get ahead of the next outage?

Book a commercial electrical assessment today and discover where efficiency, safety, and savings meet.

613-225-8585
service@tyfarelectric.com