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Hot tub electrical. Hooked up right.

A 240V dedicated circuit, a GFCI breaker, a code-required disconnect within sight of the tub, and bonding. Most residential hot tub installs are a single-day electrical job once the tub is set on the pad.

TN LicensedResidential · Vacation RentalPermits handled
Service Overview

A tub needs more than a plug.

Most hot tubs sold in East Tennessee are 240V, 50-amp, GFCI-protected units. A handful are 120V “plug-and-play” models that are slow to heat and rarely worth it. Either way, the electrical install is more than running an extension cord — there are code-required disconnects, bonding, and inspector-mandated clearances that protect everyone using the tub.

A typical residential hot tub install runs a 240V, 50-amp dedicated circuit from your panel out to the tub. The breaker has to be GFCI-protected (almost always installed at the panel, not as an inline unit), and the code-required disconnect lives within sight of the tub but more than 5 feet away — usually mounted on a post or the side of the house. The bonding lug on the tub frame ties back to the grid.

We handle three flavors of hot tub install: brand-new tubs on a fresh pad with no existing electrical (full run from the panel), tubs being relocated within the property (re-route an existing circuit), and tubs swapped onto an existing electrical install (verify the existing circuit is correctly sized and GFCI-protected, replace anything that isn’t).

For cabin and vacation-rental owners in Sevier County, we also handle commercial-occupancy requirements: tubs in rental properties often need slightly different documentation, and properties registered as STR (short-term rental) with the county have to maintain pull-down log books for any GFCI nuisance trips.

Typical scope
240V dedicated circuit · GFCI breaker · disconnect · bonding lug · pad-side wiring
Typical timeline
Single day typical · longer for long underground runs
Typical price
$650 – $1,400 typical · $1,400+ for long underground runs or panel work
Permit
Pulled by us · electrical permit always required
Inspection
Scheduled and walked-through by us · typically next-day for residential
Warranty
2 years labor · manufacturer warranty on disconnect and breaker
What’s Included

Hot tub electrical scope.

Load calculation first

NEC 220-compliant calc on your existing panel before we recommend the circuit size. Most modern panels can take a new 50A circuit; older 100A panels may need to be evaluated.

240V, 50A dedicated circuit

Standard for modern residential hot tubs. We size the conductor for the run length (longer runs = larger conductor to avoid voltage drop), and we route conduit cleanly to the equipment pad.

GFCI breaker at the panel

A two-pole GFCI breaker sized for the tub. Far more reliable than inline GFCI disconnects and required by current code on most hot tub circuits.

Code-required disconnect

NEMA 3R rated disconnect within sight of the tub but at least 5 feet from the water’s edge. Mounted on a post or building wall, lockable in the OFF position for service.

Bonding lug + ground grid

Hot tubs come with a bonding lug on the frame. We tie it to the grounding electrode system with #8 solid copper, matching the bonding requirements that apply to pools and spas under NEC 680.

Vacation-rental / STR documentation

For owners renting cabins through STR platforms, we leave the inspection sign-off and the GFCI test schedule in the cabin’s service binder. Helps with insurance, county registration, and tenant complaints.

Recent Hot tub electrical Work

Field log.

Deck-side hot tub electrical
Deck
Deck-side hot tub electrical
GFCI breaker · 50A circuit
Panel
GFCI breaker · 50A circuit
NEMA 3R disconnect installed
Disconnect
NEMA 3R disconnect installed
Vacation-rental hot tub circuit
Cabin
Vacation-rental hot tub circuit
Service Map · 100mi Radius

Where we install this.

Same-day truck rolls across the East Tennessee corridor. Sevier, Knox, Blount, Jefferson, and Cocke counties primarily.

How We Run This Job

Five steps. No surprise invoices.

Step 01

Text or call us first

Describe the job. We follow up with a phone chat to scope it, then we send your quote. Same-day for most residential.

Step 02

On-site walk-through

For larger jobs, we come out, look at the panel, and talk through what you actually want. Free. No “let me get back to you.”

Step 03

Itemized quote

Every line item priced. Materials, labor, permit, inspection. You see exactly where the dollars go before you sign anything.

Step 04

Job day · permits handled

We pull permits, coordinate with the county inspector, and arrive when we said we would. We protect your floors. We label every breaker. We test every circuit before we leave.

Step 05

Inspection & sign-off

Inspector signs off, we walk you through what changed, we hand over the documentation. If anything ever flickers, you have our cell.

Customer Log · Voice Drop
Hot tub electrical installation in East Tennessee

Volt Pro ran the 50A circuit for our new tub on a Tuesday and the inspector signed it off Wednesday. The hot tub dealer’s “preferred electrician” had quoted us 10 days out and twice the price.

Mark K. · Pigeon Forge · 50A hot tub circuit · April 2026
Common Questions

Five things we get asked every week.

What size circuit does a hot tub need?
Almost every modern residential hot tub uses a 240V, 50-amp circuit with GFCI protection. A handful of small “plug-and-play” tubs use a regular 120V 15A outlet but they’re slow to heat. Check your tub’s spec sheet for “service” or “electrical requirements” — we’ll size the circuit to match.
How much does a hot tub electrical install cost?
For a typical residential install, $650 to $1,400. The variables are run length (panel to tub), whether the run is interior or exterior (underground conduit costs more), and whether your panel needs work. Long underground runs from the panel to a detached deck can push to $2,000+.
Why does the disconnect need to be within sight of the tub?
Code requires a means of disconnect within sight of the tub (so someone servicing it can verify the power is off) and at least 5 feet from the water (so the disconnect itself is safely placed). We mount it on a deck post or the side of the house, NEMA 3R rated for outdoor exposure.
Do I need a permit for a hot tub electrical install?
Yes. Every Tennessee jurisdiction we work in requires an electrical permit on hot tub circuits. We pull it, the inspector visits after rough-in or at final, and we walk it through. You don’t call a government office.
Can you re-use an existing circuit if I am swapping tubs?
Sometimes. We verify the existing circuit is the right amperage, properly GFCI-protected, properly bonded, and has a working disconnect at the right location. If anything fails, we replace whatever’s wrong. Often the existing run is fine and only the breaker or disconnect needs updating.
Now booking · East Tennessee

Hot tub on the way? Let us pre-quote.

On-site walk-through within the week. Itemized quote before any work starts.