Consumer Unit Standards: RCBO, SPD, and Amendment 2 Requirements

Quick Answer: Under BS 7671:2018+A2:2022, SPDs are effectively mandatory for all new and rewired domestic installations unless the property owner formally declines protection in writing. Full RCBO boards are not a regulatory requirement but are now industry best practice over split-load dual-RCD boards due to superior selectivity and fault isolation. All domestic consumer units must use non-combustible (metal) enclosures per Regulation 421.1.201.

Summary

BS 7671:2018 Amendment 2, effective from 28 March 2022, significantly tightened surge protection requirements by removing the previous risk assessment opt-out and making SPDs the default for virtually all installations. The amendment deleted the old Clause 443.5 risk assessment method and replaced it with a straightforward requirement: fit SPDs unless the owner explicitly accepts the risk in writing. For consumer unit hardware, the industry has moved decisively toward full RCBO boards, where every circuit has its own combined RCD/MCB device, eliminating the nuisance tripping and half-property blackouts common with split-load dual-RCD arrangements. Metal (non-combustible) enclosures have been mandatory for domestic consumer units since 1 January 2016 under the 17th Edition Amendment 3, carried forward into the 18th Edition. These three requirements together -- SPDs, appropriate RCD protection, and metal enclosures -- define the modern domestic consumer unit installation.

Key Facts

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Detailed Guidance

What changed with BS 7671 Amendment 2?

Amendment 2 of BS 7671:2018 (published as BS 7671:2018+A2:2022) came into effect on 28 March 2022. The changes most relevant to consumer unit specification are:

Surge protection (Chapter 443):

Safety services definition (Part 2):

Other Amendment 2 changes affecting consumer units:

When is an SPD required?

Scenario SPD Required? Regulation
Installation feeds mains-wired smoke/fire alarm Yes -- mandatory 443.4.1 (safety service)
Installation feeds emergency lighting Yes -- mandatory 443.4.1 (safety service)
Installation feeds life-support or medical equipment Yes -- mandatory 443.4.1 (serious injury/loss of life)
Installation feeds IT/server equipment with significant data Yes -- mandatory 443.4.1 (significant data loss)
Standard domestic installation (typical house/flat) Yes -- unless owner declines in writing 443.4.1 + 443.4.2
Owner formally declines SPD (no safety services present) Not required, but document the refusal 443.4.2
Addition of a single circuit to existing installation Risk assessment by designer -- generally recommended GN to 443.4

If the owner declines SPD protection:

SPD type selection:

SPD Type Typical Location Use Case
Type 1 (T1) Origin of installation Installations with external lightning protection or overhead supply
Type 2 (T2) Consumer unit / distribution board Standard domestic and commercial installations (most common)
Type 3 (T3) Near terminal equipment Additional protection for sensitive equipment (used alongside T1/T2)
Type 1+2 combined Consumer unit Single device covering both T1 and T2 protection

For the vast majority of domestic work, a Type 2 SPD fitted in the consumer unit is sufficient. Type 1 or combined Type 1+2 devices are needed where the supply is via an overhead line or where a lightning protection system is installed on the building.

RCBO board vs split-load MCB+RCD -- which should I specify?

This is the single most common specification question on domestic consumer unit work. Here is a direct comparison:

Factor Full RCBO Board Split-Load Dual-RCD Board
Fault isolation Only the faulted circuit trips. Rest of the property stays live. One fault trips the RCD, killing all circuits on that half of the board -- potentially losing lights, fridge, and alarm simultaneously.
Nuisance tripping Minimal. Each RCBO handles only its own circuit's leakage current (max 15 mA typical before trip). Common. Combined leakage from multiple circuits sharing one RCD can exceed trip threshold. Background leakage from 5-6 circuits grouped together often approaches 25 mA.
Fault finding Immediate -- the tripped RCBO identifies the faulty circuit. Time-consuming -- must isolate individual MCBs under the tripped RCD to identify the fault. Callback risk.
Material cost (typical 10-way) 250-350 pounds (board populated with RCBOs) 120-180 pounds (board with 2x RCDs and MCBs)
Installed cost difference 800-1,200 pounds total 500-800 pounds total
Cost premium 200-400 pounds more than split-load Baseline
EV charger compatibility Each RCBO can be specified as Type A individually for the EV circuit. May need a separate Type A RCD or RCBO for the EV circuit, potentially requiring a second enclosure.
SPD integration Most RCBO boards have dedicated SPD slots. SPD slots available on most modern split-load boards too.
BS 7671 compliance Fully compliant. Fully compliant, provided RCD groupings meet selectivity requirements (Reg 531.3).
Future expansion Adding a circuit means adding one RCBO. Simple. Adding a circuit may unbalance the RCD groupings, requiring redistribution of circuits.

When to specify a full RCBO board:

When a split-load board may still be acceptable:

The industry direction is clear. The majority of UK wholesalers now stock RCBO boards as the primary product line. Several major manufacturers have reduced or discontinued their split-load ranges. The 200-400 pound material premium is marginal against the total installed cost and the reduction in callbacks.

What about metal consumer units -- is that still required?

Yes. Metal (non-combustible) enclosures remain mandatory for all domestic consumer units.

History:

Current position under 18th Edition:

Practical notes:

How do I select the right consumer unit?

1. Number of ways

Count the circuits you need, then add spare capacity:

Property Type Typical Circuits Recommended Board Size
1-bed flat 6-8 10-way
2-3 bed house 8-12 12-14 way
4-5 bed house 12-16 16-18 way
Large house / annexe 16+ 20-way or split across boards

Always allow a minimum of 2 spare ways for future expansion (EV charger, home office circuit, garden supply). BS 7671 Regulation 132.8 requires the designer to consider future requirements.

2. Main switch rating

3. RCD/RCBO selection

4. Type A RCD considerations

Type A RCDs detect both AC and pulsating DC fault currents. They are required for:

Type A RCBOs cost marginally more than Type AC but are increasingly specified as the default for all circuits.

5. SPD provision

6. Labelling and documentation

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to replace an existing plastic consumer unit?

No. There is no retrospective requirement to replace a functioning plastic consumer unit. The metal enclosure requirement (Regulation 421.1.201) applies only when a consumer unit is newly installed or replaced. However, if any work triggers a consumer unit change (e.g., rewire, board upgrade, additional circuits requiring a larger board), the new unit must be metal.

Can the customer refuse an SPD and still get a certificate?

It depends. If the installation includes any safety service (mains-wired smoke alarm, fire alarm, emergency lighting), SPD protection is mandatory under Regulation 443.4.1 and cannot be declined. If no safety services are present, the owner can formally decline SPD protection under Regulation 443.4.2, but this must be documented in writing on or alongside the Electrical Installation Certificate. In practice, almost every domestic installation has a mains-wired smoke alarm, making SPDs effectively non-optional.

Is an AFDD (Arc Fault Detection Device) required in domestic consumer units?

Under the current BS 7671:2018+A2:2022, AFDDs are recommended but not mandatory for standard domestic installations. Regulation 421.1.7 recommends their use in premises with sleeping accommodation, locations with risk of fire due to stored materials, locations with combustible construction, and fire-propagating structures. AFDDs are likely to become more widely required in future amendments. They are already mandatory in some other European countries and in specific UK premises types (e.g., Houses in Multiple Occupation under some local authority requirements).

What SPD do I need for an overhead supply?

Installations supplied via an overhead line are more exposed to transient overvoltages from lightning strikes to the network. A Type 1 or combined Type 1+2 SPD should be installed at the origin of the installation. Check the SPD manufacturer's guidance for the correct impulse current (Iimp) rating -- typically 12.5 kA per pole for a Type 1 device in a domestic TN-S or TN-C-S installation.

Do I need a separate SPD for a three-phase supply?

Yes. Three-phase SPDs protect all three phases and neutral. A single-phase Type 2 SPD will not adequately protect a three-phase installation. Ensure the SPD is rated for the system voltage and earthing arrangement (TN-S, TN-C-S, or TT). TT installations require additional consideration as the SPD discharge path is via the earth electrode, which has a higher impedance than TN arrangements.

Regulations & Standards