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BayouGenerators

Tangipahoa Parish · South Louisiana

Standby Generator Installation in Hammond

When the wind takes the lines down, your home stays powered. We connect Hammond homeowners with a vetted, licensed local installer — one who knows the I-12 corridor, the Tangipahoa flood maps, and how long this parish really stays dark.

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Hammond

Why Hammond homes need standby power

Hammond isn’t a coastal town — and that changes the whole conversation about backup power. Sitting inland on the I-12 corridor, roughly 45 miles from both Baton Rouge and New Orleans and home to Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond is far enough from the Gulf that storm surge is rarely the problem. The problem is what the wind does to the trees.

Tangipahoa Parish is pine-and-oak country, and a hurricane this far inland still arrives with tropical-storm to hurricane-force gusts. Those gusts snap pines and drop limbs across the overhead lines that feed the parish — which is exactly why an inland town can sit in the dark for as long as a coastal one. Entergy Louisiana serves most of the Hammond area, with electric co-op territory in some of the rural reaches of the parish, and either way the failure point is the same: limbs on the wires.

Water is the second half of the story, and again it’s not surge — it’s rain and river. The Tangipahoa River and the parish’s flat, low-lying ground have produced some of Louisiana’s worst inland flooding, including the historic 2016 rain events. When a storm parks over the parish, the threat is rising water from above and from the river, not a wall of seawater.

A permanently installed standby generator answers both. It detects the outage and restores power automatically — usually within seconds — and runs for as long as the grid is down, whether that’s a single stormy night or two weeks of wind cleanup. See how installation works →

Recent history

What outages actually look like in Hammond

Hurricane Ida — August 2021

Ida’s eastern eyewall raked the western side of Tangipahoa Parish with gusts well over 90 mph, tearing pines and oaks out of the ground and piling debris along U.S. 190 from Livingston east into Hammond. The day after landfall, more than 70% of the parish’s residents — out of roughly 135,000 — had no power, and in the harder-hit pockets restoration dragged on for more than two weeks during dangerous late-summer heat. It’s the clearest proof that being inland doesn’t mean the lights stay on.

August 2016 flood

A slow-moving system dumped 20–30 inches of rain on the Florida Parishes, driving record flooding in the Tangipahoa River Basin. Tens of thousands of structures across the Hammond and Baton Rouge areas took on water — a reminder that here, the flood threat is rain and river, not surge.

Hurricane Zeta — October 2020

Tangipahoa came through Zeta with lighter impacts than the coast — a few thousand customers out at the peak — but it’s a useful reminder that even a glancing storm, on top of routine spring and summer thunderstorms, regularly puts Hammond circuits in the dark.

Tangipahoa Parish

Permitting in Hammond

A standby install around Hammond is a permitted job, and which office signs off depends on whether your address is in the parish or inside city limits — exactly why you want an installer who pulls these permits here every week.

Tangipahoa Parish Permit Office

For unincorporated addresses around Hammond, the parish’s Permit Office on Club Deluxe Road handles building, electrical, and mechanical permits, inspections, and floodplain management — and it offers online submission for electrical permits.

City of Hammond vs. parish

Inside the Hammond city limits, the City’s building department may handle review instead of the parish. The two jurisdictions overlap around the edges of town, so confirming which office applies to your parcel is the first step a good installer takes.

Licensed, registered contractors

The electrical and gas work has to be performed by a properly licensed contractor registered to pull permits in the parish — not a handyman or an out-of-area outfit that disappears when the inspection comes due.

Flood elevation & placement

If your address sits in a FEMA flood zone — common in the low ground near the Tangipahoa River and south of U.S. 190 — the unit goes on a pad above the Base Flood Elevation. NFPA 37 clearances from windows and doors then decide where on the lot it can legally sit.

Fuel

Natural gas or propane in Hammond?

Across much of Hammond, Atmos Energy distributes natural gas, so a lot of homes can run a standby generator straight off the existing line — no tank to bury, nothing to refill, even through a multi-day outage. Out in the rural parts of Tangipahoa Parish, where the gas main doesn’t reach, propane on a buried or above-ground tank is the standard route. Your installer confirms what’s available at your address before recommending a unit. Compare natural gas vs propane →

Cost

What a standby generator costs in Hammond

There’s no single price — it depends on the size of the unit, your fuel, and how much electrical and gas work your home needs. Around Hammond the common cost drivers are a flood-elevation pad for homes in the low ground, the length of the gas or propane run on larger parish lots, and proper whole-home sizing for the summer air-conditioning load.

The honest way to get a real figure is a free in-home assessment — that’s exactly what we connect you with.

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Typical whole-home install (≈ 22–26 kW)

$12k–$22k

Includes the transfer switch, the pad, and permitted electrical and gas work. Managed-load systems can come in lower; large liquid-cooled units for big homes run higher.

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

Hammond standby generator FAQ

Do I need a permit for a generator in Hammond?

Yes. A standby install needs an electrical permit and a mechanical/gas permit, and the electrical work has to be done by a licensed contractor registered with the parish. Around Hammond those permits typically run through the Tangipahoa Parish Permit Office on Club Deluxe Road, which also handles the floodplain side; inside city limits the City of Hammond may be involved as well. A local installer knows which office your address falls under and pulls the right permits.

Does my generator have to be elevated in Hammond?

It depends on your flood zone. Hammond is inland, so a lot of higher ground in town sits outside the worst flood mapping — but plenty of Tangipahoa Parish, especially the low-lying areas near the Tangipahoa River and south of U.S. 190, falls inside FEMA flood zones with a Base Flood Elevation. Where that applies, the unit gets set on a pad above the BFE so a rain or river flood can’t take out the very system you’re counting on. Your installer checks your parcel before placing anything.

Can I run a standby generator on natural gas in Hammond?

In much of Hammond, yes. Atmos Energy distributes natural gas across the Hammond area, so many homes can run a standby generator straight off the existing line — no tank to bury, nothing to refill. In rural parts of Tangipahoa Parish where the gas main doesn’t reach, propane on a buried or above-ground tank is the standard alternative.

How much does a standby generator cost in Hammond?

Most whole-home installs around Hammond land in roughly the $12,000–$22,000 range, depending on the size of the unit, your fuel, and how much electrical and gas work the home needs. A required flood pad or a longer gas or propane run can nudge it higher. That’s a ballpark, not a quote — a free in-home assessment is the only way to an exact number.

Why do inland towns like Hammond still lose power for so long?

Because the threat here is wind and trees, not surge. Hammond sits on the I-12 corridor well north of the coast, but hurricanes still arrive with tropical-storm to hurricane-force gusts that drop pines and oaks across overhead lines parish-wide. After Hurricane Ida in 2021, more than 70% of Tangipahoa Parish lost power, and restoration in the harder-hit pockets stretched on for over two weeks. A standby generator runs the whole time those lines are down.

Do you install the generators yourselves?

No, and we’re upfront about it. Bayou Generators is a South Louisiana resource that connects you with one vetted, licensed local installer who works the Hammond and Tangipahoa Parish area. We’re not a contractor and we don’t sell your information to a call-center list — your request goes to a single trusted local pro.

Get Hammond storm-ready

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

Call Now — (504) 949-0736