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River City Generators

Duval County · The Beaches

Standby Generator Installation in Jacksonville Beach

Same county as Jacksonville, different grid. The Beaches run on Beaches Energy, and when the barrier island goes dark after a storm, a standby generator keeps your home running. We connect you with a vetted, licensed local installer who knows the coast, the flood maps, and how Jax Beach permits a job.

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Jacksonville Beach, by the numbers

350 ft
of the Jax Beach Pier torn off by Hurricane Matthew in 2016
2 sides
of water: the Atlantic on the east, the Intracoastal on the west
Own grid
Beaches Energy runs the local power, not JEA
See if standby power is right for your home

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Tell us about your home and we'll connect you with one vetted, licensed installer across the First Coast. No call-center list, no pressure, no cost.

  • A single trusted local installer, not a lead-seller list
  • Local permitting, flood-zone, and utility know-how
  • Free in-home assessment sets your real number
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Jacksonville Beach

Why the Beaches need standby power

Jacksonville Beach shares a county line with the rest of Duval, but almost nothing else about its power situation is the same. The barrier island is a narrow strip with the Atlantic Ocean on one side and the Intracoastal Waterway on the other, so weather that would just soak an inland yard can flood a beach street from two directions at once.

Just as important, the lights here are not run by JEA. Jax Beach, Neptune Beach, part of Atlantic Beach, and neighboring Ponte Vedra are served by Beaches Energy Services, the utility the City of Jacksonville Beach has owned since 1915. Beaches Energy also delivers natural gas across a lot of the area, which makes a gas-fueled standby unit a real option for many homes on the island.

Being right on the water cuts both ways. Storms that only clip Jacksonville can land square on the Beaches, because the coastline takes the surge, the wind, and the wave energy first. Hurricane Matthew in 2016 made that painfully clear when it tore a chunk off the Jax Beach Pier and stripped the dunes.

A permanently installed standby generator answers the whole problem. It senses the outage and brings your home back on its own, usually within seconds, and it keeps running for as long as the grid is down, whether that is a few hours or the better part of a week. See how installation works →

City of Jacksonville Beach

Permitting at the Beaches

Here is the catch that trips up out-of-town crews: the beach cities are inside Duval County but are not part of the consolidated City of Jacksonville. Jax Beach permits through its own City Hall. This is what a compliant install involves.

City of Jacksonville Beach permits

Even though you are in Duval County, the beach cities are not covered by the consolidated City of Jacksonville. Jacksonville Beach runs its own building department, so a standby install permits through City Hall here: an electrical permit for the transfer switch and panel, plus a gas or mechanical permit for the fuel hookup.

Coastal flood zones

The barrier island sits between the ocean and the Intracoastal, and much of it falls inside FEMA coastal flood zones. The generator has to be set on a pad above the base flood elevation, so neither ocean surge nor an Intracoastal-side rise can drown the equipment that is supposed to keep your house running.

Higher wind design

Design wind speeds along the coast run higher than they do inland in Duval, so the pad and anchoring have to be engineered for a stronger blow. That anchoring detail is one of the things the Jax Beach inspector looks at closely before signing off.

Setbacks and screening

Tight beach lots, salt-air corrosion, and the placement rules that come with barrier-island parcels all shape where a unit can legally go. Many Beaches neighborhoods and associations layer their own screening and location requirements on top of the city code.

Recent history

What outages actually look like at the Beaches

2016

Hurricane Matthew

Matthew ran up the coast just offshore and hit the Beaches harder than almost anywhere else in Duval. Storm surge and waves ripped roughly 350 feet off the Jacksonville Beach Pier, flattened dunes, and pushed sand and debris blocks inland. Wind, not river flooding, did most of the damage here, snapping poles and dropping lines across the barrier island and cutting power to a large share of the coast.

2017

Hurricane Irma

A year later Irma drove record storm surge into Northeast Florida. The city called it the worst flooding the Beaches had seen in half a century, water came off the ocean and backed up the Intracoastal, and all four bridges over the waterway were shut when the wind climbed. The grid went dark from two directions at once.

2022

Hurricanes Ian and Nicole

Late in 2022 Ian and then Nicole brushed the First Coast weeks apart, chewing at the dunes again and knocking out power along the beaches. Neither made a direct hit, and both still left the barrier island soaked and dark, which is the whole problem with living on the edge of the Atlantic.

The coast catches it first. See the full First Coast outage history →

Fuel

Natural gas or propane at the Beaches?

Beaches Energy pipes natural gas across a good part of Jacksonville Beach, and TECO Peoples Gas covers pockets of the area as well, so plenty of homes can run a standby generator straight off an existing gas line, with nothing to bury and nothing to refill during a long outage. On the streets where mains do not reach, or for owners who would rather keep their fuel on site, propane from a tank is the proven alternative. Compare natural gas vs propane →

Cost

What a standby generator costs at the Beaches

No two installs price out the same. It comes down to the size of the unit, your fuel, and how much electrical and gas work the home needs. The Beaches carry their own cost drivers: flood-elevation pads on the barrier island, heavier wind anchoring for the coastal design speed, and corrosion-resistant hardware for the salt air all tend to nudge a job upward.

The honest way to get a real figure is a free in-home assessment, and that is exactly what we set up for you.

Get my free quote

Typical whole-home install (about 20 to 26 kW)

$13k to $22k

Includes the transfer switch, elevated pad, and permitted electrical and gas work. Managed-load setups can land lower; large liquid-cooled units for big oceanfront homes run higher.

A ballpark for planning, not a quote. Your in-home assessment sets the real number.

Jacksonville Beach standby generator FAQ

Who provides my power in Jacksonville Beach, JEA?

No, and it surprises a lot of new residents. Jacksonville Beach is in Duval County but is served by Beaches Energy Services, the city-owned utility that also powers Neptune Beach, part of Atlantic Beach, Palm Valley, and Ponte Vedra. It runs its own electric grid separate from JEA, which is why outages and restoration on the barrier island follow their own timeline.

Do I need a permit for a generator in Jacksonville Beach?

Yes, and you pull it through the City of Jacksonville Beach, not the City of Jacksonville. The beach cities keep their own building departments. A standby install needs an electrical permit for the transfer switch and panel work plus a gas or mechanical permit for the fuel connection, all handled by licensed trades. A local installer files these for you.

Does my generator have to be elevated at the Beaches?

Usually, yes. The barrier island sits low between the Atlantic and the Intracoastal, and most of it is mapped in FEMA coastal flood zones. The unit gets set on a pad above the base flood elevation so surge from the ocean or a rise on the Intracoastal side cannot take it out. Skipping this is one of the most common mistakes on coastal installs.

Can I run a standby generator on natural gas in Jacksonville Beach?

Often, yes. Beaches Energy delivers natural gas as well as electricity across much of the beaches, and TECO Peoples Gas reaches parts of the area too, so many homes can run standby power straight off an existing line. Where gas does not reach the street, propane from an on-site tank is the standard alternative.

How much does a standby generator cost in Jacksonville Beach?

Most whole-home installs at the Beaches fall in a rough range of about $13,000 to $22,000. Coastal exposure adds to it: flood-elevation pads, extra wind anchoring, and corrosion-resistant hardware for the salt air all push toward the higher end. That is a ballpark for planning, not a quote. A free in-home assessment is the only way to a real number.

Do you install the generators yourselves?

No, and we say so plainly. River City Generators is a First Coast resource that connects you with one vetted, licensed local installer. We are not a contractor and we do not sell your details to a call-center list, so your request goes to a single trusted local pro who knows the Beaches.

Repair & service

Generator repair & maintenance in Jacksonville Beach

Already have a standby unit at the Beaches? Salt air is hard on equipment, so regular service is what makes sure it actually fires up when the next storm rolls in off the Atlantic. The vetted local pros we connect you with handle generator repair, annual maintenance, and battery replacement, not just new installs. If your unit is flashing a warning, skipping its weekly self-test, or has gone a year without service, get it looked at before hurricane season. See the maintenance guide →

Service area

Generator installation near you in Jacksonville Beach

Searching “generator installation near me” around Jacksonville Beach? We connect homeowners across Jacksonville Beach and Duval County with a vetted, licensed local installer. The smart time to lock in a quote is before hurricane season, the best installers book up fast once the first storm is in the Gulf.

  • Neptune Beach
  • Atlantic Beach
  • South Beach
  • Isle of Palms
  • Sunshine Acres

Learn more

Standby generator guides

Plain-spoken answers before you commit: sizing, fuel, install day, and local permitting.

01 How to Size a Home Standby Generator Sizing a home standby generator on the First Coast: kW basics, why AC surge and well pumps drive the math, and how a load calc sizes your unit. Read guide 02 Do I Need a Standby Generator? Do you need a standby generator on the First Coast? Who benefits most, the local outage reality from Matthew to Irma, and honest cases where you may not. Read guide 03 Natural Gas vs Propane Standby Generators How natural gas and propane fuel a whole-home standby generator on the First Coast, and which one fits your Jacksonville, Nassau, or Clay County home. Read guide 04 Standby vs Portable Generators: First Coast Guide Standby vs portable generators for a First Coast hurricane outage: transfer switch, runtime, refueling, CO safety, cost, and who a portable really fits. Read guide 05 Standby Generator Permitting on the First Coast How generator permitting works across Jacksonville, St. Johns, Clay, and Nassau counties on the First Coast, including flood and wind rules. Read guide 06 What to Expect on Generator Install Day A step-by-step look at standby generator install day on the First Coast, from site assessment through inspection, load test, and weekly self-test. Read guide 07 Standby Generator Maintenance Guide Standby generator maintenance for the First Coast: the weekly self-test, annual service, battery swaps, and beating salt-air corrosion near Jacksonville. Read guide 08 Hurricane Prep for Your Standby Generator Hurricane prep for your First Coast standby generator: a June checklist, fuel readiness, and what to do before, during and after a storm. Read guide

Get the Beaches storm-ready

Tell us about your home and we will connect you with a vetted Jacksonville Beach installer for a free, no-pressure quote, or call now to talk it through.

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