Summary

BS 7671 — the IET Wiring Regulations — is the technical standard for electrical installations in the UK. It is not a statutory document but is referenced by Building Regulations (Part P), and compliance is considered necessary evidence of safe installation. Courts treat non-compliance as strong evidence of negligence.

The 18th Edition (published 2018) introduced significant changes from the 17th Edition, including stronger RCD requirements, AFDD recommendations, and new sections for special locations. Amendment 1 (2020) and Amendment 2 (2022) introduced further updates. All electricians must work to the current version.

Key Facts

  • Current standard: BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 (18th Edition + Amendment 2). Amendment 2 came into effect January 2022.
  • Produced by: IET (Institution of Engineering and Technology) and BSI.
  • Legal status: Not statute but referenced by Building Regs. Non-compliance with BS 7671 is prima facie evidence of non-compliance with Part P and the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989.
  • RCD protection (Chapter 41 + 531): Most final circuits in domestic premises require 30mA RCD protection. Exceptions are limited. Types: RCBOs (per-circuit); split-load consumer unit (some RCD protection only); fully RCD-protected consumer unit. 18th Ed. moved strongly toward individual RCBO protection.
  • AFDD (Arc Fault Detection Devices): Recommended (Regulation 421.1.7) for new or rewired domestic installations — bedrooms as a minimum. Not yet mandatory in the UK (unlike USA/some EU countries), but inspectors increasingly expect them for new installations.
  • SPD (Surge Protection Devices): Required (Regulation 443) where loss of installation would have serious consequences or where replacement cost is high (most new domestic installs justify this). Note: risk assessment required but most domestic installations now warrant SPD provision.
  • EV charging: Regulation 722 (Section 722) covers EV charging points. Requirements: dedicated circuit, appropriate EVSE (Electric Vehicle Supply Equipment), earthing arrangement. Mode 3 charging (dedicated EVSE with control pilot) is the standard for domestic wallbox.
  • Cable sizing: Calculated using BS 7671 Appendix 4 (current-carrying capacity tables) accounting for installation method, grouping, and thermal insulation.
  • Earth fault loop impedance (Zs): Must be verified against Table 41.2 to confirm protective device will disconnect within the required time (0.4s for socket outlets in TN systems; 5s for distribution circuits).
  • Periodic inspection: Domestic: 10 years or on change of occupancy. Rental: 5 years (mandatory under Electrical Safety Standards in the Private Rented Sector Regulations 2020).
  • EIC / EICR: Electrical Installation Certificate on completion of new work. Electrical Installation Condition Report for periodic inspection.

Quick Reference Table: Key 18th Edition Changes from 17th Edition

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Topic 17th Edition 18th Edition (current)
RCD protection Chapter 41 — selective approach Stronger presumption toward RCD for most circuits
AFDD Not mentioned Regulation 421.1.7 — recommended for domestic, bedrooms minimum
SPD Encouraged where appropriate Regulation 443 — required where risk assessment justifies (most new installs)
EV charging No dedicated section Section 722 — specific requirements for EVSE, earthing, load management
Solar PV Section 712 Section 712 updated — DC isolation, fire risk (rapid shutdown guidance)
Cable in insulation Derating required More prescriptive — concealed cables in walls must be RCD protected or at prescribed depth

Detailed Guidance

RCD Protection Requirements

The 18th Edition (and especially Amendment 1/2) strengthens RCD requirements significantly:

Socket outlets (Regulation 411.3.3):

  • All socket outlets in domestic premises rated ≤20A must have 30mA RCD protection
  • Exception: where documented risk assessment determines it unnecessary (very limited)

Cables concealed in walls (Regulation 522.6.202):

  • Unless protected by earthed metallic covering, cables concealed in walls must be:
    • At ≥50mm from surface, OR
    • Protected by earthed metallic conduit, OR
    • Protected by 30mA RCD

New circuits — recommended approach:

  • Individual RCBO per final circuit in new or replacement consumer units
  • Avoids discrimination problems (single RCD tripping and taking out many circuits)
  • Provides best fault discrimination

Types of RCD for domestic use:

  • Type A: Detects sinusoidal AC residual current + pulsating DC residual current. Required where electronic loads (inverters, EVSEs) are present.
  • Type AC: Detects sinusoidal AC only. Not acceptable for circuits supplying EV chargers or solar inverters.
  • Type F: Type A + smooth DC. Required by some EVSE manufacturers.
  • Type B: Detects all types including smooth DC. Required for some three-phase EV chargers.

AFDD Requirements (Regulation 421.1.7)

Arc Fault Detection Devices detect series and parallel arc faults — the type of fault that can cause fires in wiring without tripping overcurrent or RCD protection (e.g., damaged insulation that arcs but doesn't present as a full short circuit).

Current UK requirement: Recommended, not mandatory. Regulation 421.1.7 states "AFDDs should be considered" for domestic premises — particularly for circuits serving bedrooms.

Best practice (and market direction):

  • Install AFDD on all new or rewired domestic final circuits
  • Minimum: bedroom circuits and circuits serving sleeping areas
  • Combination RCBO+AFDD devices available from Hager, ABB, Siemens, Schneider

Note: Scotland has moved toward stronger AFDD requirements in new domestic builds. This may foreshadow England/Wales regulatory changes.

SPD Requirements (Regulation 443)

Regulation 443 requires a risk assessment to determine whether SPDs are needed. For domestic installations, the key question is: "Would loss of the installation or equipment have serious consequences?"

For most new domestic installations:

  • Modern electronics (smart TVs, computers, routers, heat pump controllers) are highly susceptible to surge damage
  • Risk assessment typically concludes SPD is warranted
  • Type 1+2 SPD installed at the consumer unit; Type 2 is sufficient for most domestic
  • Cost: ~£50–£150 for the device, plus installation time

EV Charging — Section 722 Requirements

Section 722 contains specific requirements for EV charging points:

Key requirements:

  • Dedicated circuit from the consumer unit to the EVSE (no shared circuits)
  • Socket-outlet type: unless protected by EVSE with BS EN 62955 (RCM), socket outlets must not be used for EV charging outdoors
  • Protective earthing: TT installations require additional measures
  • Type A RCD minimum; many wallbox manufacturers specify Type A or Type F
  • Smart charging: EVSE must support OLEV (now OZEV) smart charging requirements for grant eligibility
  • Load management: consider impact on existing supply capacity (single-phase 100A max; three-phase for high-demand installations)

Cable Selection and Sizing

Typical domestic circuit designs (Appendix 4, Table 4D2A — flat twin and earth):

Circuit Typical Load Cable Size OPD
Ring final (sockets) 7,200W 2.5mm² T&E 32A
Radial sockets 3,600W 2.5mm² T&E 20A
Cooker 10–14kW 6mm² T&E 40–45A
Shower (9.5kW) 9,500W 6mm² T&E 40A
EV charger (7.4kW) 7,400W 6mm² T&E 32A
Lighting (up to 2kW) 2,000W 1.0mm² T&E 6A

Sizes assume clipped direct, no grouping, no thermal insulation. Always recalculate for actual installation conditions.

Periodic Inspection and EICR

EICR grading:

  • C1 (Danger present): Immediate risk; rectify immediately; do not issue satisfactory certificate
  • C2 (Potentially dangerous): Urgent remedial action required
  • C3 (Improvement recommended): Not immediately dangerous but improvement advisable
  • FI (Further investigation): Cannot determine condition without investigation

Mandatory EICR for rental properties (England):

  • Every 5 years or on each new tenancy
  • Landlord must provide tenant with copy within 28 days
  • Remedial work (C1/C2) must be completed within 28 days (or sooner if urgent)
  • Enforced by local authority (penalty up to £30,000)

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to use BS 7671 if I am not Part P registered?

Yes. BS 7671 applies to all electrical installations in the UK regardless of who carries them out. Non-compliance is not excused by not being Part P registered — it simply means the installation is both non-compliant with BS 7671 and unnotified under Building Regulations, which compounds liability.

What edition am I working to?

BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 (18th Edition + Amendment 2). Amendment 2 came into effect January 2022. If you trained to the 17th Edition or earlier 18th Edition, you must have received update training. Competent Person Schemes (NICEIC, NAPIT) require members to keep currency with amendments.

Is a Periodic Inspection the same as an EICR?

Yes — EICR (Electrical Installation Condition Report) is the formal name for what was previously called a Periodic Inspection and Test Report. The format changed with the 18th Edition.

Regulations & Standards