Outdoor Electrical Installations: IP Ratings, RCD Protection & Armoured Cable

Quick Answer: All outdoor electrical installations must be protected by a 30mA RCD, use equipment with a minimum IP44 rating, and be installed to BS 7671:2018+A2:2022. Cables buried in the ground must be armoured (SWA) or run in conduit at a minimum depth of 500mm (750mm under driveways).

Summary

Outdoor electrics cover everything from garden sockets and lighting to outbuildings, hot tubs, and EV chargers. The risks are significantly higher outdoors than indoors — water ingress, physical damage, and the fact that people are often standing on damp earth when using equipment all combine to demand a higher standard of protection.

BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 (the IET Wiring Regulations, 18th Edition) governs all electrical installations in the UK, and outdoor work falls under several specific sections — particularly Chapters 7 (Special Installations and Locations) including 701 (Bathrooms), 702 (Swimming Pools), 705 (Agricultural) and the general outdoor location requirements. Most domestic outdoor work falls within the scope of Part P of the Building Regulations, meaning it must either be done by a registered competent person or notified to building control.

A common mistake is treating outdoor electrics as a simple extension of indoor wiring. The choice of cable, depth of burial, IP rating of accessories, and the RCD protection requirements are all different. Getting this wrong can void insurance, create a danger to life, and result in enforcement action from the local authority.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Location Minimum IP Rating Notes
Covered porch/canopy (sheltered) IP44 Must still be on RCD
Open garden socket IP44 minimum IP55 recommended
Exposed coastal/windy site IP65 Corrosion-resistant fixings
Swimming pool Zone 1 IP55 12V max in Zone 0
Hot tub Zone 1 (within 2.5m) IP55, Class II No socket outlets in Zone 1
Garden lighting (ground level) IP65 Spike-mounted fittings
Outdoor floodlight (wall mounted) IP44 min IP65 preferred
Outbuilding socket IP44 if inside building Standard if weatherproof location
Cable Type Suitable For Notes
SWA (Steel Wire Armoured) Direct burial, underground runs Industry standard for buried outdoor cables
MICC (Mineral Insulated) High temp, aggressive environments More expensive; specialist installation
SY (Screened Flexible) Above ground, machinery Not for direct burial
LSZH SWA Where low smoke is required Preferred in public areas
2.5mm² SWA Most domestic garden circuits Check volt drop on long runs

Detailed Guidance

RCD Protection Requirements

The 18th Edition made 30mA RCD protection mandatory for all outdoor circuits, including those serving outbuildings and garden areas. This can be provided in several ways:

An RCBO (combined MCB and RCD) is the cleanest solution as it avoids nuisance tripping affecting other circuits. Standard 30mA trip time is 300ms maximum; for areas with a higher risk (swimming pools, wet ground), Type S (selective) devices may be used upstream.

One important point: RCDs protect against earth fault currents but not all overcurrents. The circuit still needs appropriate overcurrent protection via an MCB or fuse.

IP Rating Explained

IP (Ingress Protection) ratings have two digits:

IP Code Solid Protection Water Protection
IP44 Protected from objects >1mm Splashing from any direction
IP54 Dust protected Splashing from any direction
IP55 Dust protected Water jets from any direction
IP65 Dust tight Water jets from any direction
IP66 Dust tight Powerful water jets
IP67 Dust tight Temporary immersion to 1m
IP68 Dust tight Continuous immersion (specified depth)

For outdoor sockets, look for the weatherproof cover spring-loaded or screw-cap type that maintains its IP rating even when a plug is inserted — these are labelled "IP44 with plug inserted" or similar.

Burying Cables Safely

Direct burial without armouring is not acceptable under BS 7671. Options are:

  1. SWA cable — Direct burial with marker tape above; no conduit needed
  2. Standard cable in rigid conduit — The conduit provides mechanical protection equivalent to armouring
  3. MICC cable — Expensive but almost indestructible; used in high-risk areas

Trench requirements:

When crossing a driveway, ducting (100mm diameter minimum) should be laid through a compacted base, allowing the cable to be withdrawn and replaced without excavation.

Outbuildings (Garages, Sheds, Garden Offices)

Outbuildings require a dedicated sub-circuit or sub-distribution board. Key requirements:

If the outbuilding has a metal structure (garden office with steel frame), additional supplementary equipotential bonding may be needed.

Hot Tubs and Swimming Pools

These are the most regulated outdoor electrical applications:

Hot tubs — A zone system applies:

Hot tubs must have a dedicated 32A radial circuit with 30mA RCD protection. A lockable isolator within 2m of the tub but outside Zone 1 is required. Supplementary equipotential bonding to all extraneous conductive parts (metal handrails, pool structure) is mandatory.

Swimming pools — Additional zone requirements and specific construction standards apply; specialist guidance from BS EN 60335-2-60 and IET guidance is recommended.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I just run a standard 2.5mm² cable from an outdoor socket to a shed?

No. Standard twin and earth cable is not suitable for outdoor use or burial. You must use SWA armoured cable for any underground run, or at minimum run the standard cable inside rigid conduit buried at 500mm depth. The risk of someone digging through an unprotected buried cable is too high — it's a Part P compliance issue and a genuine safety risk.

Does an outdoor socket need to be on its own circuit?

Not strictly, but it's best practice. You can extend from an indoor ring final circuit to serve one or two outdoor sockets provided the circuit is already RCD protected and the volt drop is within limits. A dedicated circuit gives you cleaner fault isolation and makes any future inspection simpler. For anything more than a couple of garden sockets (and certainly for hot tubs or outbuildings), run a dedicated circuit.

What's the difference between IP44 and IP65 for garden sockets?

IP44 protects against water splashing from any direction — fine for a covered porch or under an eave. IP65 adds full dust protection and protection against water jets, making it suitable for exposed garden walls. In practice, IP44 sockets in exposed positions often become problematic within a few years as water works into the conduit entries. Spend the extra money on IP65 for anything in an open garden.

My garden lighting is on a plug-in transformer — does it still need notifying?

A plug-in low-voltage (12V or 24V) garden lighting system that simply plugs into an existing socket does not require Part P notification — it's a domestic appliance. However, any fixed wiring (connecting cables permanently into a socket or junction box, running cables in conduit, adding new sockets) does require either a competent person or building control notification.

Regulations & Standards