Building Regulations Part P: When Do I Need to Notify Building Control?

Quick Answer: Under Building Regulations 2010, Part P (Electrical Safety -- Dwellings), you must notify Building Control before starting any electrical work that involves installing a new circuit or making additions/alterations to existing circuits in special locations (bathrooms, shower rooms). In England, special locations are limited to rooms containing a bath or shower. In Wales, special locations also include kitchens and outdoor areas. Notification is not required for like-for-like replacements, repairs, or additions to existing circuits outside special locations. Work must be carried out by a Part P registered electrician (who self-certifies) or notified to a Building Control Body before work begins.

Summary

Part P of the Building Regulations has applied to electrical work in dwellings in England and Wales since 1 January 2005. The current guidance is Approved Document P (2013 edition, effective 6 April 2013), which significantly reduced the scope of notifiable work compared to the original 2005 edition. The regulation exists to reduce death, injury, and property damage caused by faulty electrical installations in homes. All electrical work in dwellings -- whether carried out by a professional or a homeowner -- must comply with Part P and meet the technical standard BS 7671 (IET Wiring Regulations, currently 18th Edition with Amendment 2). The critical distinction every tradesperson needs to understand is between notifiable work (which requires Building Control involvement or competent person self-certification) and non-notifiable work (which must still comply but does not need formal notification).

Key Facts

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Detailed Guidance

What electrical work IS notifiable under Part P?

The following work always requires notification to a Building Control Body (or self-certification by a registered competent person):

1. Installation of a new circuit (anywhere in a dwelling)

2. Any addition or alteration to an existing circuit in a special location

In England, special locations are:

In Wales, special locations are:

Examples of notifiable work in special locations:

What electrical work is NOT notifiable?

The following work does not require Building Control notification (but must still comply with BS 7671):

What are special locations under Part P?

Special locations receive additional scrutiny because water, damp conditions, or outdoor exposure increases the risk of electric shock.

Location Special in England? Special in Wales?
Bathroom / shower room / wet room Yes Yes
Room containing a swimming pool Yes Yes
Room containing a sauna or steam room Yes Yes
Kitchen No (since 2013) Yes
Outdoors (garden, patio, driveway) No (since 2013) Yes
Garage (attached or detached) No No
Utility room (no bath/shower) No No
Loft / basement No No

Note: BS 7671 has its own definition of special locations (Section 7) which is broader and includes agricultural premises, construction sites, marinas, etc. The Part P definition of special locations is specifically for determining notification requirements and is narrower.

How do competent person schemes work?

Competent person schemes (CPS) are government-authorised programmes that allow registered electricians to self-certify their notifiable work as compliant with Building Regulations, without involving Building Control.

Approved scheme operators for electrical work:

How it works in practice:

  1. The electrician registers with a CPS, demonstrating competence (typically NVQ Level 3 or equivalent, plus assessment)
  2. When they complete notifiable work, they issue the customer an Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC) and a Building Regulations Compliance Certificate
  3. The scheme operator notifies the local authority on the electrician's behalf
  4. The local authority records the work and can issue a completion certificate if requested

Cost comparison:

Route Typical Cost Notes
Competent person scheme (annual) £300--£600/year Covers unlimited self-certification. No per-job Building Control fee. Includes annual assessment.
Building Control notification (per job) £150--£300 per notification Must notify before work starts. BCO inspects during and after. Significant overhead on small jobs.
Regularisation (after the fact) £250--£500+ 130--160% of the normal Building Notice fee. No guarantee of approval. May require opening up finished work.

For any tradesperson doing regular notifiable electrical work, CPS registration pays for itself within 2--3 jobs compared to the Building Control route.

What happens if I don't notify?

Immediate consequences:

When selling the property:

Insurance implications:

Regularisation process:

  1. Apply to the local authority Building Control department for a regularisation certificate
  2. Pay the regularisation fee (typically 130--160% of the full plans charge -- varies by council, no VAT)
  3. The BCO will inspect the installation, which may require opening up concealed work
  4. If the work is found to comply with the standards in force at the time it was done, a regularisation certificate is issued
  5. If the work does not comply, remedial work must be carried out before the certificate is issued
  6. There is no time limit for applying for regularisation, but the local authority is under no obligation to grant it

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a plumber do electrical work in a bathroom?

It depends on what the work involves. A plumber can legally make a final connection to an electric shower, towel rail, or extractor fan using an existing fused spur or isolator that has already been installed by an electrician -- this is connecting an appliance, not altering a circuit. However, if the work involves running new cable, adding a new spur, or modifying the circuit in any way within a bathroom (a special location in both England and Wales), it is notifiable and must be done by a Part P registered electrician or notified to Building Control. In practice, most plumbers sub-contract the electrical first-fix to a registered electrician and handle the appliance connection themselves.

Do I need Part P for replacing a consumer unit?

Yes, in practice. Consumer unit replacement involves working on every circuit in the dwelling and is treated as notifiable work by all major competent person schemes. Since January 2016, Approved Document P guidance has been that CU replacements should be notified. The work must also comply with BS 7671 requirements for RCD protection (split-load or RCBO board), metal consumer unit enclosures (Regulation 421.1.201), and correct labelling. Always use a Part P registered electrician for this work.

Can I add a socket in my kitchen without notification?

In England, yes -- adding a socket or spur to an existing circuit in a kitchen is not notifiable because kitchens are not special locations under the 2013 edition of Approved Document P. The work must still comply with BS 7671 (correct cable sizing, RCD protection, safe installation). In Wales, no -- kitchens remain special locations, so any addition or alteration to an existing circuit in a kitchen is notifiable.

Does Part P apply to my garden office or outbuilding?

Yes, but the trigger depends on the circuit. If you are running a new circuit from the consumer unit in the house to the outbuilding, that is notifiable anywhere in England and Wales (new circuit). If the outbuilding already has a supply and you are adding sockets or lights to the existing circuit, it is not notifiable in England (not a special location) but is notifiable in Wales (outdoors is a special location). The installation must comply with BS 7671 Section 722 (caravans and camping parks do not apply -- use Section 705 for agricultural/horticultural premises or general requirements for outbuildings).

Is commercial/industrial electrical work covered by Part P?

No. Part P applies only to dwellings and their associated land and outbuildings. Electrical work in shops, offices, factories, and other non-domestic buildings is not subject to Part P notification requirements. However, all commercial electrical work must still comply with BS 7671, the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989, and may be subject to other Building Regulations (e.g. Part B fire safety). Mixed-use premises (e.g. a flat above a shop) -- the dwelling portion is covered by Part P.

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