Originally Posted by jessekimmerling
The above respondent is mostly correct. I would add that the requirement for a service disconnect is for multi-family units according to the National Electric Code. Many local jurisdictions will require it for single family units as well, but not necessarily.
Be sure to match your breaker amperage to the hot tub. Most folks think hot tubs all require 50 amp breakers. Some hot tubs are 40 or 30 amp. You want the breaker size to match the hot tub. Bigger is not better, it's very dangerous. A 50 amp breaker will not trip in time to prevent damage and possibly a fire if a 40 amp hot tub with correctly sized wires is pulling more amps than it should.
That said, if you want to wire it on the cheap, and are not getting an inspection, you can slap a 2 pull 50 amp GFCI (if that's the size it takes) breaker in your main panel, run 6/3 romex inside and/or two #6 hots (one red one black for ease of identification) a #6 neutral, and a #8 ground inside rigid metalic or pvc conduit, or liquid tight conduit outside to the point where you enter the hot tub.