A Lumin Smart Panel installed costs $3,000 to $8,000 in San Diego, and unlike its main competitor, it doesn’t require ripping out your existing panel to get there.
TL;DR
- Installed cost runs $3,000-$8,000, lower than a full smart panel swap because there’s no main panel replacement.
- Lumin installs alongside your existing panel and controls a subset of circuits, typically up to about 12.
- It’s built to pair with solar and battery systems you already have, or are installing now.
- You get per-circuit monitoring and app control on the circuits Lumin manages, not the whole panel.
- A permit and a licensed electrician are required for the install.
What a Lumin Smart Panel actually is
Lumin is a smart load controller that installs alongside your existing main panel, not in place of it. An electrician wires a set of circuits, usually the ones that matter most during an outage or that you want app-level control over, through the Lumin module. Everything else stays on your original panel exactly as it is.
That’s the core difference from Span, which replaces the whole panel and monitors every circuit in the house. Lumin manages a curated subset, typically up to around 12 circuits, chosen for what actually matters: the fridge, a few lighting circuits, the well pump if you have one, the home office, maybe the garage. You get real-time monitoring and remote on/off control on those circuits through Lumin’s app, plus automated prioritization if you’re pairing it with a battery.
Because it’s an add-on rather than a replacement, the install is a smaller job. No de-energizing and pulling the entire service, no SDG&E meter coordination unless your project includes other panel work.
What it costs installed in San Diego
| Component | Cost |
|---|---|
| Lumin hardware and controller | $1,200-$2,500 |
| Install labor, wiring the managed circuits, permit | $1,800-$5,500 |
| Total, typical install | $3,000-$8,000 |
The spread depends almost entirely on how many circuits you’re routing through Lumin and how far they sit from your panel. A homeowner managing 6 priority circuits close to the panel lands near the low end. Someone managing closer to 12 circuits spread across the house, with longer wire runs, lands near the top.
If your existing panel doesn’t have room for the Lumin hookup, or you’re on old 60A or 100A service that needs work regardless, that’s a separate project. Our panel upgrade cost guide for San Diego covers that baseline pricing, and it’s worth ruling out before you budget for Lumin.
Lumin vs. Span: why the price gap
Homeowners researching smart panels usually find both options and wonder why one costs half of the other. The answer is scope, not quality. Span replaces your main panel and monitors every circuit in the house. Lumin adds smart control to a chosen subset while your original panel keeps doing its job for everything else.
That makes Lumin the lower-cost path to circuit-level control and battery prioritization, especially if your existing panel is in good shape and you don’t need a full replacement anyway. It’s the more efficient choice for someone who mainly wants smart backup management for the circuits that matter during an outage, not full-house visibility.
We’ve written a full breakdown comparing the two directly in our Span vs. Lumin guide for San Diego homeowners, including which setup fits which kind of solar and battery configuration. If you’re leaning toward the full-panel route instead, see our Span Smart Panel cost guide.
Who this makes sense for
Lumin is the better fit for San Diego homeowners who already have a panel in decent shape, don’t need more amperage, and mainly want smart control and backup prioritization on the circuits that matter. It’s also the more common choice when a battery is being added to an existing solar system rather than a from-scratch solar-plus-battery install.
It’s less of a fit if your panel is genuinely undersized, on old 60A or 100A service, or already showing signs it needs replacing anyway. In that case, a full panel swap, Span or otherwise, is the more honest starting point, and adding smart control on top of new capacity makes more sense than layering Lumin onto a panel you’re going to replace within a few years regardless. Our panel upgrade cost guide and our post on when to upgrade an electrical panel both help sort out which situation you’re in.
Older San Diego neighborhoods, Clairemont, Rancho Bernardo, and parts of El Cajon and La Mesa built between the 1960s and 1980s, tend to fall into the “needs replacing anyway” category more often than newer construction. Homes built after 2000 with 200A service already in place are the more typical Lumin candidates.
Permits and the install process
California requires a permit and a licensed electrician for Lumin’s installation, same as any panel-adjacent electrical work. The city inspects the wiring to the managed circuits and confirms the install meets code before signing off.
The process starts with a site visit to identify which circuits you want managed and confirm your existing panel has the physical room for the Lumin module. From there, a licensed electrician pulls the permit, runs the wiring to the selected circuits, mounts and wires the Lumin controller, and schedules the city inspection. You can confirm any electrician’s license through the CSLB license lookup before hiring.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a Lumin Smart Panel cost installed in San Diego?
Installed cost runs $3,000 to $8,000, with hardware around $1,200-$2,500 and labor plus permit making up the rest. The exact number depends mostly on how many circuits you’re routing through the Lumin module and how far they are from your panel.
Does Lumin replace my existing panel?
No. Lumin installs alongside your existing main panel and manages a subset of circuits, typically up to around 12. Your original panel stays in place and continues handling everything Lumin isn’t managing. That’s the core difference from Span, which is a full panel replacement.
How many circuits can a Lumin Smart Panel control?
Typically up to around 12 circuits, chosen based on what matters most during an outage or for daily monitoring. Common picks include the fridge, key lighting circuits, a home office, and a well pump if the home has one.
Is Lumin a good fit if I already have solar?
Yes, this is one of the most common scenarios. Lumin pairs well with an existing solar setup, especially when a battery is being added afterward and you want smart prioritization on specific circuits without redoing the whole panel.
Does a Lumin Smart Panel installation require a permit in San Diego?
Yes. Any wiring modification to add the Lumin controller requires a city permit and inspection. A licensed electrician handles the permit application and schedules the inspection as part of the install.
When to call us
Lumin installs touch live circuits inside your existing panel, and choosing the right circuits to manage takes some judgment about how your home actually uses power. We can walk your panel, help you pick the right circuit list, and handle the permit and install as one project. Our smart home wiring service covers the app setup and automation once Lumin is in. Call us at (858) 988-5580 for a same-day estimate.