Dedicated 240V/50A GFCI • NEC 680 Compliant • Permit & Inspection • Licensed • (239) 888-8888
Hot tubs and portable spas require a dedicated 240V, 50-amp, GFCI-protected circuit — along with a weatherproof, lockable disconnect installed within sight of the spa but no closer than 5 feet and no farther than 50 feet. These requirements are governed by NEC Article 680, which also mandates equipotential bonding of all metal spa components to prevent dangerous voltage gradients in the water. ElectriciansX installs hot tub and spa circuits throughout Southwest Florida — fully permitted and inspected.
Lehigh Acres is one of Lee County’s most populous communities, with a large inventory of mid-century and newer construction homes where electrical upgrades and additional circuits are in high demand. Hot tubs are a popular addition to Lee County homes with screened lanais and backyard pools. Before your spa powers on, the electrical work must be complete, permitted, and inspected. Attempting to power a spa from an extension cord or existing outlet is dangerous and a code violation.

Complete NEC 680-compliant spa wiring — circuit, disconnect, bonding, permit, and inspection.
We run a dedicated 240V, 50A circuit from your main panel to the spa location with a GFCI breaker installed at the panel — the most common hot tub electrical requirement.
NEC 680.12 requires a lockable, weatherproof disconnect within sight of the spa (5–50 ft). We install a properly rated outdoor disconnect as part of every spa circuit.
NEC 680.26 requires all metal spa components — shell, equipment, water, surrounding deck hardware — to be bonded to prevent shock hazards. We complete the full bonding grid.
A 50A hot tub circuit requires significant panel capacity. We verify your panel can support the new circuit and advise on upgrades if needed.
Spa and hot tub wiring requires an electrical permit and inspection in all Southwest Florida jurisdictions. We handle every step of the permit-to-inspection process.
Moving or replacing an existing spa? We reconnect the circuit to the new spa location, verify bonding compliance, and update any wiring that doesn’t meet current code.
We review your spa's owner's manual for voltage, amperage, and wiring requirements — ensuring the circuit matches the manufacturer's specifications.
We verify your main panel can support a new 240V/50A circuit without exceeding safe load limits.
We run 4-wire, 6 AWG wire from the panel to the spa disconnect location, installing a 50A GFCI double-pole breaker at the panel.
We mount the weatherproof disconnect within NEC-required range, run wire from disconnect to spa junction box, and complete all connections per NEC 680.
We complete the equipotential bonding grid, pull the required permit, and coordinate the inspection sign-off before you fill and heat the spa.
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Most 240V portable hot tubs require a dedicated 240V, 50A, 4-wire circuit with a GFCI double-pole breaker at the panel. A weatherproof, lockable disconnect must be installed within sight of the spa (5–50 ft away). The circuit, disconnect, and bonding must be permitted and inspected in all Southwest Florida jurisdictions.
Yes — always. NEC 680.44 requires GFCI protection for all 240V hot tub and spa circuits. The GFCI breaker is installed at the panel and protects the entire spa circuit. A standard non-GFCI breaker is not code-compliant and is a serious shock hazard near water.
Per NEC 680.12, the disconnect must be within sight of the spa, no closer than 5 feet from the spa water’s edge, and no farther than 50 feet. It must be readily accessible, lockable, and weatherproof. We position it correctly as part of every installation.
Yes — always. Hot tub and spa electrical work requires an electrical permit and inspection in all Lee County, Collier County, and Charlotte County jurisdictions. There are no exceptions. ElectriciansX handles all permit applications and inspection coordination.
Some small portable spas (110V “plug-and-play” models) are designed for standard 20A GFCI outlets. However, most full-size hot tubs (240V models) cannot be plugged into a standard outlet — they require a dedicated 240V circuit. Attempting to run a 240V spa on an inadequate circuit is dangerous and can damage the spa.
NEC 680.26 requires all metal components of a hot tub — the spa shell hardware, pump motors, water heater, and any metal within 5 ft of the spa’s interior walls — to be bonded together with a solid copper conductor. This prevents dangerous voltage differences between components that could cause shock. ElectriciansX completes the full bonding grid as part of every spa installation.