Part P Building Regulations: Notifiable Electrical Work, Competent Person Schemes and Self-Certification

Quick Answer: Part P of the Building Regulations requires that all electrical installation work in dwellings is designed, installed, inspected and tested to BS 7671 (IET Wiring Regulations). Certain work must be notified to Building Control — either via a registered Competent Person (electrician self-certifies) or by submitting a Building Notice. Not all electrical work is notifiable; minor work in non-special locations can be done without notification.

Summary

Part P came into force in January 2005 under the Building Regulations 2000. Its purpose is to ensure electrical safety in homes — previously there was no requirement to notify Building Control of domestic electrical work, leading to widespread unsafe DIY installations.

The regulation applies to dwellings (houses, flats, garden buildings used as habitable space) and to communal areas of blocks of flats. It does not apply to commercial premises (which are covered by the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 and BS 7671 as applied by competent electricians).

The key concept is that "notifiable work" requires either a registered competent person or a Building Notice. "Non-notifiable minor work" can be done by anyone competent, but must still comply with BS 7671. Many homeowners and small traders misunderstand this — they believe Part P only applies to full rewires, but it actually applies to most new circuits.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Work Type Notifiable? Document Required
Full rewire Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance
Consumer unit replacement Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance
New circuit (any room) Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance
New circuit in kitchen/bathroom Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance
EV charger installation Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance
Solar PV/battery installation Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance
New outdoor socket or light Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance
Adding socket to existing ring final (living room) No Minor Works Certificate
Adding socket to existing ring final (kitchen) Yes EIC
Replacing like-for-like socket/switch No None required (but use care)
Replacing a damaged cable in existing circuit No None required
New bathroom fan (on existing circuit) No (in zone 2+) Minor Works Certificate
New shower circuit Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance
Outdoor socket (new circuit) Yes EIC + Certificate of Compliance

Detailed Guidance

What Work Is Notifiable

Approved Document P (2013 edition) defines notifiable work as:

  1. Installation of a new circuit — any new circuit originating from a consumer unit, distribution board or similar.
  2. Replacement of a consumer unit — replacing a fuse box or distribution board in its entirety.
  3. Work in special locations:
    • Zones 0, 1 and 2 of rooms containing a bath or shower (see bathroom zones)
    • Swimming pools and paddling pools
    • Garden/outdoor installations
    • Garages
    • Solar PV systems
    • EV charging equipment
    • Generators

The list above catches almost all significant electrical work. The practical implication: if in doubt, treat it as notifiable.

What Work Is NOT Notifiable (Minor Work)

Even non-notifiable work must comply with BS 7671. A Minor Works Certificate should be issued to record that the work is safe.

Competent Person Schemes

Registered competent persons can self-certify their work, removing the need for Building Control involvement. The main schemes:

Scheme Covers
NICEIC Electrical contracting, telecoms, EV
NAPIT Electrical, heating, plumbing, insulation
ELECSA Electrical
SELECT Electrical (Scotland)
ECA Electrical Contractors Association members

What registration provides:

What to check when hiring: look for the scheme logo, search the scheme's online register by postcode or company name, and ask to see the registration card.

Building Notice Route

Where work is carried out by someone not registered with a competent person scheme:

  1. Submit a Building Notice to your Local Authority Building Control (LABC) before starting work.
  2. Pay the Building Notice fee (typically £150–£400 for electrical work, LA-dependent).
  3. Carry out work complying with BS 7671.
  4. Contact LABC to arrange inspection — they may require inspection during and/or after.
  5. LABC may require an independent electrical test by an approved inspector.
  6. LABC issues a completion certificate when satisfied.

Important: LABC will not issue a completion certificate unless the installation passes testing. This means the client (homeowner) may face additional inspection costs if the work fails.

Documentation

Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC):

Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR):

Minor Works Certificate:

Liability Without Documentation

If notifiable electrical work is carried out without a certificate or Building Control sign-off:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a homeowner do their own electrical work?

Yes — a homeowner can carry out electrical work in their own home. However, if it is notifiable, they must submit a Building Notice to LABC before starting. They will need to comply with BS 7671 and arrange for testing. They cannot self-certify (only registered competent persons can do that).

Does Part P apply to garden buildings?

Yes, if the garden building is used as a habitable room (office, gym, studio). The supply from the house to the building is notifiable (new circuit). The wiring within the building is also notifiable. NICEIC and similar registered electricians can self-certify the whole installation.

What happens if I buy a house and find undocumented electrical work?

Commission an EICR (Electrical Installation Condition Report) from a registered electrician. If the installation is safe, note the EICR for future reference. If there are C1/C2 defects, remedy immediately. There is no requirement to retrospectively notify Building Control for pre-2005 work.

Does changing a consumer unit require Part P notification?

Yes — consumer unit replacement is always notifiable. It must be carried out by a registered competent person (or via Building Notice) and an EIC must be issued. Note also that replacement consumer units must comply with BS EN 61439-3 (consumer unit standard) and must be metal-enclosed since 2016 under Amendment 3 to 17th Edition.

Regulations & Standards