Kitchen Electrical Layout: Socket Heights, Circuits & Part P Requirements

Quick Answer: Kitchen electrical work is notifiable under Part P of Building Regulations in England — a registered electrician must either do the work or it must be notified to Building Control. A full kitchen rewire typically requires: a dedicated 32A or 45A cooker circuit, a dedicated 13A ring or radial circuit for sockets, a separate 13A circuit for a fridge (if always-on), and a 20A fused spur for the dishwasher and washing machine. Socket height above worktop is typically 150-200mm (no specific Building Regs minimum, but under 150mm is impractical).

Summary

Kitchen electrics are one of the highest-risk areas of domestic electrical work — water, heat, and mechanical wear all combine to create a challenging environment. Building Regulations Part P (England) requires all electrical work in kitchens to be either carried out by a registered competent person (through an approved scheme like NICEIC, ELECSA, NAPIT) or notified to Building Control before work starts.

For tradespeople who are not themselves registered electricians, understanding the electrical requirements is essential for coordinating the work correctly, specifying what the electrician needs to provide, and quoting the project accurately. This article covers the standard circuit requirements, socket layout, socket heights, and the Part P notification requirements for kitchen work.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Circuit Rating Protection Notes
Electric cooker (single oven + hob) 32A radial 32A RCBO Cooker switch; 6mm² cable minimum
Electric cooker (range 60cm+) 45A radial 45A RCBO 10mm² cable; consult manufacturer's spec
Kitchen socket ring / radial 32A ring / 20-32A radial 32A RCBO Minimum 2.5mm² cable
Fridge/freezer 16A radial (unswitched) 16A RCBO Keep always-on; unswitched socket
Dishwasher 20A FCU or socket 20A RCBO Behind unit; FCU preferred
Washing machine 20A FCU or socket 20A RCBO Behind unit; FCU preferred
Extractor fan 5A fused spur or FCU RCBO Via isolator switch at hood
Under-unit lighting 5A fused spur MCB/RCBO Via local dimmer if dimmable
Boiling water tap 13A socket (local switched) RCBO Check manufacturer's requirements

Detailed Guidance

Part P — What Is Notifiable

In England, Part P of Building Regulations covers electrical safety in dwellings. Kitchen electrical work (installation, alteration) is in a "special location" and is therefore:

Notifiable work requiring self-certification or Building Control notification:

Self-certification means the electrician holds a registration with an approved scheme (NICEIC, ELECSA, NAPIT, SELECT in Scotland) and issues a Minor Electrical Installation Works Certificate or Electrical Installation Certificate on completion.

If the electrician is not scheme-registered, the work must be notified to Building Control before starting, and inspected and signed off on completion. In practice, virtually all professional domestic electricians are scheme-registered.

Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales have their own building standards and equivalent notification requirements — always check the relevant authority.

Cooker Circuit

The cooker circuit is a dedicated radial circuit from the consumer unit to a cooker switch, then to the cooker. The requirements:

For a separate oven and hob: if within 2m of each other, one 45A cooker switch can supply both (through the outlet plates). If more than 2m apart, treat each as a separate cooker and provide separate circuits or consult BS 7671 Section 434.

Socket Layout and Heights

Recommended minimum sockets for a full kitchen:

Heights:

Zone rules near sinks: sockets must be at least 300mm horizontally from a sink or drainer. Sockets must not be positioned directly above a sink. Over-sink areas are a "special location" under BS 7671.

Induction Hob Electrical Requirements

Induction hobs are increasingly common and have high power demand:

Hob Size Typical Power Circuit Requirement
60cm induction (4 zones) 7.2-7.4 kW 32A radial; 6mm² cable
60cm induction (4 zones, flex-zone) 7.4 kW 32A radial minimum
80cm induction (5 zones) 7.4-11.1 kW 45A radial; 10mm² cable
90cm induction Up to 14.1 kW 63A radial; consult manufacturer

Check the manufacturer's datasheet for the specific hob before specifying the circuit. Some high-end induction hobs require a 3-phase supply — this is a significant additional cost (3-phase supply from DNO if not already available).

Consumer Unit Requirements

If the kitchen electrical work requires adding new circuits, assess whether the existing consumer unit has spare ways. If not, options are:

  1. Replace the consumer unit with a larger unit (Part P notifiable; must be a registered electrician)
  2. Add a distribution board (sub-consumer unit) downstream of the main consumer unit

All consumer units in domestic dwellings must comply with BS EN 61439-3 (domestic and similar switchgear assemblies) and must be housed in a non-combustible enclosure (metal, or specific compliant plastic). If replacing a consumer unit, this is the opportunity to upgrade to full RCBO protection on all circuits.

Under-Unit and Pelmet Lighting

LED strip lighting under kitchen units is a popular feature. Typical specification:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I add sockets in a kitchen myself (DIY)?

Legally, you can carry out electrical work yourself in your own home, but in a kitchen (a special location under Part P) the work must be notified to Building Control and tested. Most local authorities will charge a notification fee and require an inspection. The practical result is that it is usually easier and cheaper to use a registered electrician who can self-certify.

Do I need a separate circuit for each appliance?

Not strictly required by regulations, but best practice is to have dedicated circuits for high-draw, always-on, or water-adjacent appliances (fridge, dishwasher, washing machine). This prevents a trip on one appliance from taking out the entire kitchen. At minimum, the cooker must be on its own dedicated circuit.

How many sockets should a kitchen have?

There is no regulatory minimum for socket quantity. British Standard BS 7671 does not specify a number. As a guideline: the IET (Institution of Engineering and Technology) recommends that a kitchen should have at least 6 double sockets at worktop level, plus separate provision for fridge, dishwasher, and washing machine. In practice, 10-12 double sockets for a medium-large kitchen is typical in a new build or full renovation.

Regulations & Standards