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BayouGenerators

Iberia Parish · Acadiana

Standby Generator Installation in New Iberia

When the line into the Teche country goes down, your home stays powered. We connect New Iberia homeowners with a vetted, licensed local installer — one who knows our heat, our flood maps, and the cane-country lots where the gas main runs out.

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New Iberia

Why New Iberia homes need standby power

New Iberia sits in the heart of Acadiana, strung along the slow bend of Bayou Teche in the middle of Louisiana’s sugarcane country. Power here doesn’t come from one company: Cleco Power serves most homes inside the city, while SLEMCO, the Acadiana electric co-op, covers much of the rural parish. Both run miles of overhead line through open cane fields and live oaks — exactly the kind of grid a hurricane goes after first.

Geography is the rest of the story. Much of New Iberia is flat, low, and close to the water, which means flooding and backwater rise are part of life here. When the power drops in a storm, so do sump pumps, freezers full of a season’s catch, and the air conditioning you can’t do without in an Acadiana summer.

And out past the city limits, the grid gets thinner. Long rural feeders to homes near Loreauville, Jeanerette, and Avery Island can take far longer to restore than a city block — after a major storm, rural Iberia Parish has waited days, sometimes longer, for crews to work back down every line.

A permanently installed standby generator sidesteps all of it. It detects the outage and restores power automatically — usually within seconds — and runs for as long as the grid is down. See how installation works →

Recent history

What outages actually look like in New Iberia

The 2020 double hit — Laura, then Delta

Acadiana took two hurricanes in six weeks. Hurricane Laura roared inland in August 2020 and left tens of thousands of Cleco customers dark across Iberia and the neighboring parishes. Then, on October 9, Hurricane Delta came ashore near Intracoastal City — barely a dozen miles from Laura’s track — and knocked out power to more than half of Iberia Parish at once, downing trees and lines on dozens of roads. A storm-related death was confirmed in the parish. For a lot of New Iberia families, the lights had only just come back from one storm before the next took them out again.

Hurricane Lili — October 2002

Lili came ashore near Intracoastal City and drove hard into the Teche country. A research radar clocked winds near 100 knots just south of New Iberia, and the storm left lasting damage across the area — the benchmark older residents still measure storms against.

Hurricane Ida & summer strain — 2021 onward

Ida’s 2021 sweep across South Louisiana rippled into Acadiana, and beyond the named storms, routine summer thunderstorms and peak-heat load take New Iberia circuits down well outside hurricane season.

Iberia Parish

Permitting in New Iberia

New Iberia is split between two permit offices depending on which side of the city line you’re on — which is exactly why you want an installer who pulls these permits week in and week out.

City of New Iberia Inspection & Permits

For homes inside the city limits, permits run through the City of New Iberia Inspection & Permits Department on East Main Street — an electrical permit for the transfer switch and panel work, plus a mechanical/gas permit for the fuel connection.

Iberia Parish Government permit office

For homes in the unincorporated parish — the cane country toward Loreauville, Jeanerette, and Avery Island — the Iberia Parish permit office handles inspections under the Louisiana State Uniform Construction Code, the National Electrical Code, and the International Mechanical Code.

Licensed contractors

Both jurisdictions require the electrical and gas work to be done by a properly licensed contractor and inspected before final sign-off. A vetted local installer carries the license and handles the inspection scheduling for you.

Floodplain elevation

Both the city and the parish enforce floodplain building regulations. In a flood zone — common along Bayou Teche — the unit usually has to sit on a pad above the Base Flood Elevation, and NFPA 37 clearances from windows and doors decide the compliant spot.

Fuel

Natural gas or propane in New Iberia?

Inside the city, CenterPoint Energy distributes natural gas across most of New Iberia, so many homes can run a standby generator right off the existing gas line — no tank to bury, nothing to refill, even during a multi-day hurricane outage. But this is sugarcane country: once you’re out past the mains toward the rural parish, gas service runs out, and propane becomes the practical choice — a buried or above-ground tank that carries the house through a long storm. Compare natural gas vs propane →

Cost

What a standby generator costs in New Iberia

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. The New Iberia area has cost drivers worth knowing about: flood-elevation pads along the Teche, the longer fuel run on a rural propane tank, and panel or service upgrades can all move an install within the regional range.

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

Get my free quote

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

$12k–$22k

Includes the transfer switch, an elevated 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.

New Iberia standby generator FAQ

Do I need a permit for a generator in New Iberia?

Yes. A standby install needs an electrical permit and a mechanical/gas permit, and the work has to be done by a licensed contractor. Inside the city, those go through the City of New Iberia Inspection & Permits Department on East Main Street; if your home is in unincorporated Iberia Parish — out in the cane country toward Loreauville, Jeanerette, or Avery Island — they run through the Iberia Parish Government permit office instead. A local installer knows which counter to walk into.

Does my generator have to be elevated for flooding?

Often, yes. Both the city and the parish enforce floodplain building regulations, and a lot of New Iberia sits low along Bayou Teche in a FEMA flood zone. Where that applies, the unit goes on a pad set above the Base Flood Elevation so a backwater rise or a Teche flood can’t drown the very system you bought to ride out the storm. It’s a detail out-of-town crews routinely miss.

Can I run a standby generator on natural gas in New Iberia?

In town, usually yes — CenterPoint Energy distributes natural gas across most of New Iberia, so many homes run standby power straight off the existing line with no tank to refill. Out in the sugarcane country where gas mains don’t reach, propane is the standard answer, and a buried or above-ground tank handles a long outage just fine.

Who is my electric utility in New Iberia?

It depends on where you live. Cleco Power serves most homes inside the City of New Iberia, while SLEMCO — the Acadiana electric co-op — covers much of rural Iberia Parish. Either way, the value of a standby generator is the same: when the line into your neighborhood goes down in a storm, your transfer switch takes over automatically and your house keeps running.

How much does a standby generator cost in New Iberia?

Most whole-home installs in the New Iberia area land in roughly the $12,000–$22,000 range, with local factors like flood-elevation pads, the run from a rural propane tank or gas main, and panel upgrades nudging the final figure. That’s a ballpark, 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’re upfront about it. Bayou Generators is a South Louisiana resource that connects you with one vetted, licensed local installer who works the New Iberia and Acadiana 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 New Iberia storm-ready

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

Call Now — (504) 949-0736