Research by Ivan Tchesnokov
The Short Answer
YES — electrical permits required under NJ UCC (2020 NEC with NJ amendments). NJ Licensed Electrician + NJ HIC registration required. PSE&G provides electric + solar net metering under NJ BPU rules. NJ SREC-II program makes NJ one of the best solar markets. Older housing: knob-and-tube electrical upgrade considerations. Single trade permits within 48 hours.
NJ UCC requires electrical subcode permit (2020 NEC). NJ Licensed Electrician + NJ HIC registration required. PSE&G (1-800-436-7734) provides electric + NJ BPU net metering. NJ SREC-II solar program. Federal 30% credit. NJ property + sales tax solar exemptions. Older housing: knob-and-tube upgrades. Single trade permits within 48 hours. Phone: 609-989-3550.

Trenton NJ building permit framework — NJ Uniform Construction Code

The City of Trenton's Division of Technical Services (building permits) and Division of Inspections enforce the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code (NJAC 5:23) — the statewide code based on the 2021 IRC/IBC with NJ amendments, the 2020 NEC, the National Standard Plumbing Code (NSPC), and the 2021 IECC, effective September 6, 2022. As with all New Jersey municipalities, Trenton enforces the NJ UCC without local amendments — the same code applies in Trenton as in every other NJ municipality including Lakewood NJ in this guide. The Division of Technical Services is at 319 East State Street, 2nd Floor, City Hall Annex, Trenton, NJ 08608, phone 609-989-3550. Plan review: approximately 20 working days after submission; two sets of sealed plans from a NJ Licensed Architect or Engineer required for structural projects; single trade permits issued within 48 hours.

Two New Jersey-specific contractor requirements apply: First, all contractors performing home improvement work on residential properties must hold a NJ Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration from the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs at njconsumeraffairs.gov. Second, trade work requires NJ-licensed tradespeople: NJ Licensed Electrician, NJ Licensed Master Plumber (under the NSPC — National Standard Plumbing Code, unique to NJ among guide states), and NJ licensed HVAC contractors. NJ 811 (dial 811) must be called at least 3 business days before any excavation. Homeowners of single-family owner-occupied primary residences may prepare their own plans under the NJ UCC owner-builder provision.

Trenton is New Jersey's capital city, located in Mercer County on the west bank of the Delaware River bordering Pennsylvania. With a population of approximately 90,000, Trenton is one of New Jersey's oldest cities — the site of the Battle of Trenton in December 1776 following George Washington's famous Delaware River crossing. The city's residential housing stock consists largely of early-to-mid 20th century construction: rowhouses, two-family homes, and single-family detached houses from the 1900s–1950s, with some newer development. This older housing stock is a defining characteristic of Trenton's permit environment — many renovation projects involve aging building systems in structures that may have multiple prior permit histories. PSE&G (Public Service Electric and Gas) provides both electric and gas service throughout Trenton and Mercer County at 1-800-436-7734 — a dual utility role similar to NV Energy in Sparks NV and BGE in Columbia MD. New Jersey's excellent solar incentive environment — NJ SREC-II program, PSE&G NJ BPU net metering at full retail rate, federal 30% credit, and NJ sales/property tax exemptions — makes Trenton one of the more economically attractive solar markets in this guide despite Zone 4A's lower solar production than southwestern US markets.

Zone 4A (mixed-humid) — Mercer County NJ / Trenton area: ~5,000 HDD, ~1,000 CDD. Cold winters (10–20°F lows), warm humid summers (85–95°F highs). Frost depth approximately 30–36 inches in Mercer County (confirm exact depth with Division of Technical Services at 609-989-3550 before any footing excavation). Ice and water shield required at roof eaves and rakes. R-49 attic minimum. U-factor ≤ 0.30 for windows. SHGC ≤ 0.40. Zone 4A climate is identical in classification to Lakewood NJ (Ocean County) in this guide — similar code requirements apply. Delaware River proximity provides some winter moderation compared to northern NJ.

NJ Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration: All contractors performing home improvement work on residential properties in New Jersey must hold a current NJ HIC registration from the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs at njconsumeraffairs.gov. Verify any contractor's HIC registration before signing any contract. Separate from trade licenses. NJ HIC Act requires written contracts with specific disclosures for home improvement work over $500.

PSE&G solar net metering and NJ incentives: PSE&G is an investor-owned utility regulated by the NJ Board of Public Utilities (BPU). NJ BPU net metering rules provide full retail rate credit for exported solar electricity — more favorable than California's NEM 3.0. After city permits close and inspections pass, submit a PSE&G net metering interconnection application. The NJ SREC-II (Solar Renewable Energy Certificate) program provides ongoing income from solar electricity certificate sales — one of the strongest state-level solar incentive programs in the US. Combined with the federal 30% Residential Clean Energy Credit, NJ property tax exemption for solar, NJ sales tax exemption for solar installations, and PSE&G's favorable full retail rate net metering, payback periods for Trenton solar installations are approximately 6–10 years — among the strongest solar economics in the eastern US. Contact PSE&G at 1-800-436-7734 and njcleanenergy.com for current solar program details before finalizing any solar project in Trenton.

Electrical permit rules — NJ UCC 2020 NEC, PSE&G, NJ solar incentives

All electrical work requiring permits in Trenton is governed by the 2020 NEC (National Electrical Code) with NJ amendments under the NJ Uniform Construction Code. NJ Licensed Electrician required + NJ HIC registration for the contracting entity. Single trade electrical permits are issued within 48 hours in Trenton. Applications to the Division of Technical Services at 319 East State Street.

PSE&G (Public Service Electric and Gas, 1-800-436-7734) provides electric service throughout Trenton and Mercer County. PSE&G is regulated by the NJ Board of Public Utilities (BPU), and NJ BPU net metering rules provide full retail rate credit for exported solar electricity — significantly more favorable than California's NEM 3.0. After city building and electrical permits close and inspections pass, submit a PSE&G net metering interconnection application. PSE&G installs the bi-directional net meter. The NJ SREC-II program provides ongoing income from solar renewable energy certificate sales — one of the most valuable state-level solar incentive programs in the US. Combined with the federal 30% credit, NJ property tax exemption, NJ sales tax exemption, and PSE&G's full retail rate net metering, payback periods for Trenton solar installations are approximately 6–10 years.

Trenton's older housing stock creates significant electrical upgrade demand. Many pre-war Trenton homes have knob-and-tube wiring (pre-1950s) or early armored cable (BX) that cannot legally be extended or significantly modified under the 2020 NEC — virtually any major renovation triggers a requirement to replace the affected old wiring with modern NM (non-metallic sheathed cable) circuits. Service panel upgrades from 60A or 100A to 200A are common in Trenton's renovating homes to support modern electrical loads (HVAC, EV charging, appliances). PSE&G coordinates the utility-side meter upgrade after the licensed electrician completes the building-side panel upgrade. NJ HIC registered electrical contractor + NJ Licensed Electrician: verify both at njconsumeraffairs.gov.

Already know you need a permit?
Get an exact permit cost for your Trenton electrical project — PSE&G solar net metering guidance, NJ SREC-II incentive program, knob-and-tube upgrade guidance, NJ HIC + Licensed Electrician check, and permit process walkthrough.
Get my Filing Kit →
$14.99 · Based on official NJ sources · Delivered in minutes
Scenario A
Solar PV — PSE&G net metering + NJ SREC-II + federal 30% credit
A homeowner installs a 7 kW solar system. NJ HIC + NJ Licensed Electrician. Building permit (structural) + electrical subcode permit (2020 NEC Article 690) — 48-hour electrical permit. After inspections: PSE&G interconnection; bi-directional meter. Federal 30% credit. NJ SREC-II program enrollment. NJ property + sales tax exemptions. PSE&G full retail rate net metering. Annual Zone 4A production: ~7,500–9,500 kWh. Project cost: $22,000–$35,000; after 30% credit: $15,400–$24,500; payback approximately 6–10 years with SREC-II. Combined permit fees approximately $105–$175.
Estimated permit cost: $105–$175
Scenario B
Service upgrade + knob-and-tube replacement — older Trenton housing
A homeowner upgrades from 60A service to 200A and replaces knob-and-tube wiring in renovation areas. NJ HIC + NJ Licensed Electrician. Electrical subcode permit (48-hour issuance). PSE&G coordinates utility-side meter upgrade after permit inspection. Room-by-room knob-and-tube replacement: pull new NM cable through walls; update outlets/switches to modern NEC. EPA RRP-certified contractor for pre-1978 wall penetrations disturbing lead paint. Permit fees approximately $120–$185. Project cost: $5,500–$12,000 for panel + partial rewire.
Estimated permit cost: $120–$185

Every project is different.

Get your exact answer →
Takes 60 seconds · Personalized to your address
VariableHow it affects your Trenton electrical permit
NJ SREC-II — major financial incentive, unique to NJNJ SREC-II provides ongoing income from solar electricity certificate sales separate from net metering. Same program as Lakewood NJ (JCP&L) in this guide but through PSE&G territory. No comparable program in CA, NV, TX, UT, MO, MN, FL, or MD. Enroll at njcleanenergy.com or through solar contractor.
PSE&G NJ BPU net metering — full retail rateNJ BPU net metering provides full retail rate credit for exported solar electricity. Much more favorable than California NEM 3.0. Battery storage less financially urgent than in CA. Contact PSE&G (1-800-436-7734) for current program terms.
Older housing — knob-and-tube, 60A serviceMany Trenton pre-war homes have knob-and-tube wiring (cannot be extended under 2020 NEC) or undersize 60A service. Major renovation triggers knob-and-tube replacement in affected areas. 200A service upgrade common. Adds $3,000–$8,000 to renovation electrical scope.
2020 NEC — NJ electrical codeNJ uses 2020 NEC with NJ amendments. AFCI on all branch circuits; GFCI at all specified locations; NEC Article 690 for solar. NJ Licensed Electrician required.
Federal 30% credit + NJ tax exemptionsFederal 30% Residential Clean Energy Credit through 2032. NJ property tax exemption for solar. NJ sales tax exemption for solar equipment. No NJ state income tax penalty on solar credits (NJ has income tax but solar credit treatment favorable). Federal credit full value with SREC-II income.
Single trade permit — 48-hour issuanceElectrical subcode permits in Trenton issued within 48 hours for single trade scopes. Faster than multi-trade projects requiring 20-day plan review. Solar: both building (structural) and electrical permits required — electrical within 48 hours; building may require plan review.
Trenton electrical: NJ's SREC-II program and PSE&G full-retail-rate net metering make Trenton one of the eastern US's best solar markets, while older housing knob-and-tube upgrade needs create significant electrical renovation demand in New Jersey's capital city.
NJ SREC-II solar incentive guidance. PSE&G NJ BPU net metering process. Federal 30% credit + NJ tax exemptions. Knob-and-tube upgrade guidance. NJ HIC + Licensed Electrician check. 48-hour single trade permit.
Get my Filing Kit →
$14.99 · Based on official NJ sources · Delivered in minutes

What electrical work costs in Trenton

Licensed electrician rates in Trenton/Mercer County NJ: $78–$115/hr. Service upgrade (60A/100A to 200A): $3,500–$6,800. Knob-and-tube replacement (partial): $2,500–$7,000. Level 2 EV charging: $750–$1,500. Solar electrical (7 kW): $1,700–$3,300. Panel replacement: $3,200–$5,500. Permit fees: $100–$175. Contact PSE&G (1-800-436-7734) and njcleanenergy.com for current solar incentive programs. Contact Division of Technical Services at 609-989-3550 for current fee schedule.

Trenton Division of Technical Services — permit process and contact

Division of Technical Services: 319 East State Street, 2nd Floor, City Hall Annex, Trenton, NJ 08608 | 609-989-3550. Plan review: ~20 working days; two sets of NJ Architect/Engineer sealed plans for major work; single trade permits within 48 hours. NJ HIC required: njconsumeraffairs.gov. PSE&G: 1-800-436-7734. NJ 811: dial 811 (3 business days). NJ Uniform Construction Code (NJAC 5:23), 2021 IRC/IBC with NJ amendments, effective September 6, 2022, governs all permitted construction in Trenton.

NJ Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration: All contractors performing home improvement work on residential properties in New Jersey must hold a current NJ HIC registration from the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs at njconsumeraffairs.gov. Verify any contractor's HIC registration before signing any contract. Separate from trade licenses. NJ HIC Act requires written contracts with specific disclosures for home improvement work over $500.

PSE&G solar net metering and NJ incentives: PSE&G is an investor-owned utility regulated by the NJ Board of Public Utilities (BPU). NJ BPU net metering rules provide full retail rate credit for exported solar electricity — more favorable than California's NEM 3.0. After city permits close and inspections pass, submit a PSE&G net metering interconnection application. The NJ SREC-II (Solar Renewable Energy Certificate) program provides ongoing income from solar electricity certificate sales — one of the strongest state-level solar incentive programs in the US. Combined with the federal 30% Residential Clean Energy Credit, NJ property tax exemption for solar, NJ sales tax exemption for solar installations, and PSE&G's favorable full retail rate net metering, payback periods for Trenton solar installations are approximately 6–10 years — among the strongest solar economics in the eastern US. Contact PSE&G at 1-800-436-7734 and njcleanenergy.com for current solar program details before finalizing any solar project in Trenton.

Trenton Division of Technical Services at 609-989-3550 provides permit guidance. NJ Uniform Construction Code (NJAC 5:23), 2021 IRC/IBC with NJ amendments, effective September 6, 2022, governs all permitted construction. NJ HIC registration required for all hired home improvement contractors — verify at njconsumeraffairs.gov. NJ Licensed Electrician and NJ Licensed Master Plumber (NSPC) required for trade work. Zone 4A: frost footings ~30–36 in; R-49 attic; ice shield; U ≤ 0.30; SHGC ≤ 0.40. PSE&G (electric + gas dual utility): 1-800-436-7734. NJ 811: dial 811 (3 business days). NJ solar is among the most economically attractive in the eastern US: federal 30% credit + NJ SREC-II + PSE&G full retail rate net metering + NJ sales/property tax exemptions. Trenton's older urban housing stock, PSE&G dual utility, Zone 4A climate, and NJ UCC requirements define the city's distinct permit environment among guide cities.

Trenton's identity as New Jersey's capital city — the seat of state government and site of one of the American Revolution's most decisive military engagements — defines its character as a dense, historic northeastern city unlike most other guide cities in this series. The city's older housing stock (1900s–1950s rowhouses and single-family homes) creates a renovation-focused construction market where the most common permitted projects involve updating aging mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems in structures that have served multiple generations of Trenton families. The NJ Uniform Construction Code's statewide uniformity means Trenton's permit requirements are identical to every other NJ municipality — contractors familiar with NJ UCC requirements in any NJ city can apply that knowledge directly in Trenton. PSE&G's dual utility role simplifies utility coordination for projects involving both electric and gas work in Trenton's older housing stock, where updating both systems simultaneously is common in major renovations. New Jersey's exceptional solar incentive environment — particularly the SREC-II program and PSE&G's favorable full retail rate net metering — provides strong financial incentives for solar adoption even in Zone 4A's more modest solar resource. Contact the Division of Technical Services at 609-989-3550 before beginning any permitted project in Trenton to confirm NJ UCC requirements, plan submission requirements, and current permit review timelines for your specific project scope.

City of Trenton — Division of Technical Services (Building Permits) 319 East State Street, 2nd Floor, City Hall Annex, Trenton, NJ 08608
Phone: 609-989-3550 | Division of Inspections: 609-989-3540
PSE&G (electric & gas — Trenton): 1-800-436-7734 | pseg.com
NJ HIC registration: njconsumeraffairs.gov | NJ 811 before digging: 811 (3 business days)
Get your complete Trenton Electrical Work permit package
NJ Uniform Construction Code requirements. NJ HIC registration check. Zone 4A frost guidance. PSE&G coordination. NSPC plumbing. Exact permit fees.
Get my Filing Kit →
$14.99 · Based on official NJ sources · Delivered in minutes
Disclaimer: Research April 2026. Verify with Trenton Division of Technical Services at 609-989-3550. Not legal advice.