Part P Implications for Smart Home Installations: What Counts as Notifiable Electrical Work and Competent Persons Schemes
Part P of the Building Regulations (England and Wales) requires that new circuits, consumer unit replacements, and electrical work in kitchens, bathrooms, and special locations are either carried out by a registered competent person (who self-certifies) or notified to Building Control before work begins. Smart home installations frequently trigger Part P because they involve new circuits, new consumer units with additional ways, or work in special locations. Scotland and Northern Ireland have equivalent but separate regulations.
Summary
Smart home installation overlaps significantly with domestic electrical work, and the boundary between "fitting a smart switch" and "notifiable electrical work under Part P" is blurrier than many installers assume. A smart switch replacement on an existing circuit in a living room does not require Part P notification. Installing new dedicated circuits for AV equipment, adding ways to a consumer unit, or routing new circuits through a kitchen or bathroom does.
Getting this wrong creates real liability. Part P-notifiable work carried out without notification — and without a registered competent person — cannot be verified by an electrical installation condition report unless additional inspection work is done to establish compliance. More practically, a mortgage survey or home insurance claim investigation that uncovers un-notified Part P work can create significant legal and financial exposure for both the installer and the property owner.
This article covers what triggers Part P for smart home work specifically. For the full electrical regulatory picture, BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 (the Wiring Regulations) governs the design and installation standards, independent of the notification requirements under Part P.
Key Facts
- Part P Building Regulations — Approved Document P; applies in England (Housing Act 2004 backstop); separate equivalent regulations in Wales (Part P applies with minor procedural differences), Scotland (Building Standards), and Northern Ireland
- Notifiable work — work that must be either self-certified by a registered competent person OR notified to Building Control before commencement; applies in England and Wales
- Non-notifiable work — additions or alterations to existing circuits outside special locations; like-for-like replacements; not required to be notified
- New circuit — any cable run from the consumer unit (or a new distribution board) creating a circuit that did not previously exist; always notifiable
- Consumer unit replacement — replacing or adding to the consumer unit is notifiable; requires RCBO or dual RCD protection in the new consumer unit under the 18th Edition wiring regulations
- Special locations — zones in bathrooms, shower rooms, and swimming pools; any work in these areas is notifiable regardless of whether it involves a new circuit
- Kitchen electrical work — new circuits in kitchens are notifiable; adding socket outlets to an existing kitchen ring main circuit is not notifiable if outside the special location zones
- Outdoor work — new circuits to garden lighting, EV chargers, outbuildings are notifiable
- Smart switch replacement on existing circuit — replacing a conventional switch with a smart switch (like-for-like) on an existing circuit outside special locations = NOT notifiable
- New smart switch circuit — where smart switches require a neutral wire and a new cable is run = depends on whether it is addition to existing circuit or new circuit
- Registered competent persons scheme — NICEIC, NAPIT, ELECSA, Stroma; registration allows the electrician to self-certify Part P work and issue a Building Regulations Compliance Certificate without Building Control notification
- Building Control notification — for unregistered persons doing notifiable work; full plans or building notice submission; Building Control inspector carries out completion inspection
- Scotland — Building Standards Division; equivalent provisions under Technical Handbook (Domestic); verifiable by local authority building standards officers
Quick Reference Table
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Try squote free →| Smart Home Work Type | Notifiable? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Replacing switch with smart switch (same circuit, same wiring) | No | Like-for-like replacement |
| Smart switch requiring new neutral cable run | Depends | If adding new cable to existing circuit in non-special location = no; new circuit = yes |
| New circuit for AV equipment or equipment rack | Yes | New circuit = always notifiable |
| Adding RCBO/way to existing consumer unit | Yes | Consumer unit modification = notifiable |
| Consumer unit replacement | Yes | Always notifiable |
| Smart heating wired controls (replacing like-for-like) | No | If no new cable or circuit involved |
| New cat6 network cabling (data only, no mains) | No | Data cabling is not Part P regulated |
| PoE camera installation (data and PoE power) | No | PoE is SELV; not covered by Part P |
| Mains-powered PIR sensor installation | Depends | If connected to existing circuit = probably not; if new circuit = yes |
| New dedicated 13A socket circuit for equipment | Yes | New circuit |
| EV charger installation | Yes | New circuit; also requires OZEV grant compliance for qualified installer |
| Outdoor lighting on new circuit | Yes | New outdoor circuit is notifiable |
Detailed Guidance
Understanding the Scope of Part P for Smart Home Installers
Part P applies to fixed electrical installations in dwellings and associated buildings. It governs safety of the installation, not the smart home functionality. A smart home installer who never touches the mains wiring — working exclusively on Cat6, HDMI, speaker cable, and HDCP signal paths — has no Part P obligations at all.
The complications arise when smart home work requires:
- Dedicated circuits for AV equipment racks, dedicated home cinema sub-panels, or high-power equipment
- Neutral wires at switch positions — many smart switches (Shelly, Sonos, smart dimmers) require a neutral wire at the switch box; older UK wiring used loop-at-switch and has no neutral at the switch; adding a neutral requires running new cable which may constitute an alteration to an existing circuit or a new circuit run
The neutral wire question is the most common Part P grey area for smart home installers. The key test:
- Replacing the cable within an existing circuit from a switched live + earth to a live + neutral + earth — this is alteration to an existing circuit, and if it is in a non-special location, it may not be notifiable. However, the full circuit from consumer unit to switch must comply with BS 7671
- Running a new spur from an existing socket or junction box to provide a neutral at a switch — addition to existing circuit, not notifiable if outside special locations
- Running an entirely new circuit from the consumer unit — always notifiable
Competent Persons Schemes for Smart Home Electrical Work
If Part P-notifiable electrical work is required as part of a smart home installation, the installer has two options:
Option 1: Work in partnership with a registered electrician The smart home installer designs and specifies the electrical elements; a registered electrician (NICEIC, NAPIT, etc.) carries out and certifies the notifiable work; the smart home installer completes the low-voltage automation, data, and AV work. This is clean separation of liability and the recommended approach for non-electrically qualified installers.
Option 2: Obtain Part P registration An installer who is also a qualified electrician (City & Guilds 2382-18 18th Edition + 2391 Inspection & Testing minimum) can register with a Part P competent persons scheme. NICEIC and NAPIT both have residential electrical registration schemes. Registration requires: inspection of initial installations, submission of test results, business insurance verification, and ongoing CPD.
CEDIA training does not in itself qualify an installer to self-certify Part P work — a separate electrical qualification is required.
Notifying Building Control for Unregistered Work
If an unregistered person carries out notifiable Part P work, Building Control can be notified:
Building Notice: submitted before work begins; Building Control inspector visits on completion; a completion certificate is issued if work passes; cost varies by local authority but typically £150–£300 for domestic electrical work
Regularisation: if notifiable work has already been done without notification, regularisation can be applied for retrospectively; inspector assesses the work; if not visible, opening up may be required; this route is available but expensive and uncertain
Building Control regularisation of electrical work is a potential issue on property sale — surveyors and solicitors will ask for electrical certificates for work carried out after 2005 (when Part P came into force).
Scotland and Northern Ireland Equivalents
Scotland: Building Standards Technical Handbook (Domestic) Section 4.5 (Electrical Installations) governs fixed electrical installations. Notifiable work broadly mirrors Part P but operates through a different scheme — the SELECT (Electrical Contractors Association of Scotland) and NICEIC Scottish schemes. Building warrant applications are handled by local authority building standards officers.
Northern Ireland: Building Regulations (Northern Ireland) Technical Booklet P covers electrical safety. Similar scope to Part P England; notifiable work must be carried out by an electrician registered with NICEIC, NAPIT, or equivalent, or notified to Building Control.
Wales: Part P applies in Wales with minor procedural differences; the same competent persons schemes operate.
Special Locations and Smart Home Work
Smart lighting, smart heating controls, and smart security cameras are sometimes installed in bathrooms, en suites, and shower rooms. Work in these areas — even on existing circuits — is notifiable:
Zone 0 (inside the bath or shower tray) — no smart devices should ever be installed here Zone 1 (directly above the bath/shower tray, up to 2.25m above floor level) — IP rating IPX4 minimum for any equipment; Part P notifiable for any work Zone 2 (outside Zone 1, up to 0.6m horizontally from bath/shower rim) — IPX4 minimum; Part P notifiable Outside zones (beyond Zone 2 in bathroom) — standard IP rating; Part P notifiable for new circuits or consumer unit changes
Smart shower controls, bathroom TVs (IPX4 rated), and bathroom smart speakers require connection to the existing bathroom lighting or shaver circuit or a purpose-installed SELV circuit — always notifiable due to special location.
Frequently Asked Questions
My smart lighting system doesn't need new circuits — just smart switches in existing positions. Do I need to notify?
If you are replacing conventional switches with smart switches on existing circuits, with no new cable runs, and the switches are not in a bathroom or special location, the work is not notifiable under Part P. However, if the smart switches require a neutral wire and there is none present, and you need to run new cable to provide it, that may constitute an alteration that should be assessed on a case-by-case basis by a qualified electrician.
Can a CEDIA-registered installer self-certify electrical work?
No. CEDIA membership does not authorise self-certification of Part P work. Only installers registered with an approved competent persons scheme (NICEIC, NAPIT, ELECSA, Stroma, etc.) can self-certify notifiable electrical work. A CEDIA installer who is also a registered electrician can self-certify in that capacity.
What happens if I install a new AV circuit without Part P notification?
The work is technically in breach of Building Regulations. If the property is subsequently sold, a solicitor's search may reveal the absence of a Part P certificate for the work. The seller may be required to either obtain retrospective Building Control approval (which requires inspection and possible opening up of work) or reduce the sale price. The installer may face civil liability if the unnotified work causes a fire or injury.
Does PoE (Power over Ethernet) network cabling require Part P notification?
No. PoE is Safety Extra Low Voltage (SELV) — the maximum voltage is 48V DC, well below the 50V AC threshold at which Part P's fixed installation requirements apply. Running CAT6 PoE cabling for cameras, access points, or door entry systems does not require Part P notification. The PoE switch supplying the power is connected to a mains socket — that socket connection is subject to Part P if it requires a new circuit, but the PoE cabling itself is not.
Regulations & Standards
Building Regulations Part P (Electrical Safety in Dwellings) 2013 — notifiable work definition, competent persons schemes, special locations; applies England and Wales
Approved Document P 2013 — technical guidance on Part P; defines special locations, notifiable work categories, and evidence of compliance requirements
BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 (IET Wiring Regulations 18th Edition) — design and installation standard for all domestic electrical installations; applies regardless of Part P notification status
Building (Scotland) Regulations 2004 — equivalent provisions for Scotland; Technical Handbook Domestic Section 4.5
Building Regulations (Northern Ireland) Technical Booklet P — equivalent provisions for Northern Ireland
OZEV Charge Point Grant — requires installation by a certified OZEV installer; relevant for smart home EV charger integration
PSTI Act 2024 — product security requirements for connected devices; relevant to IoT device selection advice
Planning Portal — Part P Overview — summary of Part P scope and notifiable work
IET — Wiring Regulations 18th Edition Guidance — BS 7671 guidance publications
NICEIC — Competent Person Schemes — competent person registration and self-certification
Approved Document P — MHCLG — official government guidance document
[smart home systems|smart home systems overview](/wiki/electrical/smart-home-systems|smart home systems overview) — electrical implications of different smart home protocols
[smart home wiring|smart home wiring fundamentals](/wiki/electrical/smart-home-wiring|smart home wiring fundamentals) — neutral wire requirements, structured wiring cabinet design
[cedia membership smart home|CEDIA membership for smart home installers](/wiki/smart-home/cedia-membership-smart-home|CEDIA membership for smart home installers) — trade body accreditation that covers Part P awareness in training
[smart lighting installation|smart lighting installation](/wiki/smart-home/smart-lighting-installation|smart lighting installation) — neutral wire requirements for smart switches and dimmers
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