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IP Ratings Explained — What IP54, IP65, and IP68 Actually Mean for Electrical Enclosures

Learn what IP ratings mean for electrical enclosures. Understand the two-digit system for solids and liquids protection, common ratings like IP54, IP65, and IP68, IK impact ratings, and minimum IP requirements from AS/NZS 3000 and BS 7671.

10 min readUpdated March 6, 2026
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What Is an IP Rating?

An IP rating — short for Ingress Protection rating — is a standardised way of describing how well an electrical enclosure keeps out solid objects and liquids. It is defined in IEC 60529 (internationally) and adopted identically in AS 60529 (Australia/NZ) and BS EN 60529 (UK/Europe).

Think of the IP rating as a passport for an enclosure. Just as a passport tells border control which countries you can enter, the IP rating tells an engineer exactly what environmental conditions the enclosure can withstand. Without it, you are guessing — and guessing with electricity is how equipment fails, cables corrode, and people get hurt.

The rating always appears as the letters "IP" followed by two digits: for example, IP65. Each digit has a specific meaning, and understanding them separately is the key to reading any IP rating instantly.

The Two-Digit System: Solids and Liquids

The first digit (0–6) describes protection against solid objects, from large body parts down to microscopic dust. The second digit (0–9K) describes protection against water ingress, from dripping water up to high-pressure steam jets.

First Digit — Solid Object Protection

DigitProtection AgainstPractical Meaning
0No protectionOpen enclosure, no barrier
1Objects > 50 mmBack of hand cannot enter
2Objects > 12.5 mmFingers cannot enter
3Objects > 2.5 mmTools (screwdrivers) cannot enter
4Objects > 1.0 mmWires and thin strips excluded
5Dust-protectedSome dust may enter but not enough to affect operation
6Dust-tightCompletely sealed against dust — zero ingress

Second Digit — Liquid Ingress Protection

DigitProtection AgainstTest Condition
0No protection
1Vertical dripping waterDrip box, 10 min
2Dripping water at 15° tiltTilted 15° from vertical
3Spraying water60° arc spray nozzle
4Splashing waterWater from all directions
5Water jets6.3 mm nozzle, 12.5 L/min
6Powerful water jets12.5 mm nozzle, 100 L/min
7Temporary immersion1 m depth for 30 minutes
8Continuous immersionDepth and time agreed with manufacturer
9KHigh-pressure steam80°C water at 80–100 bar, close range

A common mistake is assuming that higher liquid digits include lower ones. They do up to IPx6 — an IPx6 enclosure also passes tests 1 through 5. However, IPx7 and IPx8 (immersion) are tested differently from IPx5 and IPx6 (jets). An enclosure rated IP67 has been tested against both jets and immersion, but an enclosure rated only IP68 may not have been tested against jets unless explicitly stated. This is why you often see dual ratings like IP65/IP68.

Common IP Ratings and Where They Are Used

In practice, a handful of IP ratings dominate electrical installations:

  • IP20: Finger-safe, no water protection. Standard for indoor switchboards, consumer units, and distribution boards in dry locations. Most residential circuit breakers are IP20 when the enclosure door is open.
  • IP44: Protected against objects > 1 mm and splashing water. Common for bathroom accessories (shaver sockets, extractor fans) and semi-sheltered outdoor locations.
  • IP54: Dust-protected and splash-proof. The practical minimum for general outdoor electrical enclosures — think of junction boxes on building exteriors, outdoor power points, and car park lighting. If someone asks "what IP rating for outdoors?" the answer almost always starts at IP54.
  • IP55: Dust-protected and jet-proof. Common for industrial motor terminal boxes, outdoor panels subject to rain, and washdown areas in food processing.
  • IP65: Dust-tight and jet-proof. The workhorse rating for harsh industrial environments, LED floodlights, and outdoor luminaires. An IP65 fitting can be hosed down during cleaning without damage.
  • IP66: Dust-tight and powerful jet-proof. Used in heavy industrial settings, marine environments, and anywhere enclosures are routinely cleaned with high-pressure washers.
  • IP67: Dust-tight and temporarily submersible. Popular for in-ground lighting, garden bollard lights, and junction boxes that may sit in standing water temporarily after heavy rain.
  • IP68: Dust-tight and continuously submersible. Used for underwater pool lights, submersible pump junction boxes, and permanently buried cable joints. The exact depth and duration must be specified by the manufacturer.

An analogy: IP54 is like wearing a rain jacket — you stay dry in a shower but would get soaked in a swimming pool. IP67 is like a dry bag — you can drop it in a puddle and everything inside stays dry. IP68 is a submarine — designed to operate permanently underwater.

IK Impact Ratings — The Other Number That Matters

While IP ratings cover solids and liquids, they say nothing about mechanical impact resistance. That is where IK ratings come in, defined in IEC 62262.

The IK rating ranges from IK00 (no protection) to IK10 (20 joules — equivalent to a 5 kg mass dropped from 400 mm). The most commonly specified ratings are:

  • IK07 (2 joules): Adequate for most indoor commercial installations. Resists a casual knock but not a deliberate blow.
  • IK08 (5 joules): The standard specification for public-area luminaires and accessible switchgear. Think of a school corridor or shopping centre — equipment must survive bumps from trolleys, backpacks, and cleaning equipment.
  • IK10 (20 joules): Required for vandal-prone locations — car parks, public toilets, prisons, railway stations. IK10 luminaires and enclosures can withstand a deliberate kick or hit with a blunt object.

When specifying enclosures, engineers should always consider both IP and IK ratings together. A beautifully IP65-rated outdoor luminaire is useless if its polycarbonate lens shatters from a thrown stone because nobody specified IK10.

What the Standards Require

Both AS/NZS 3000:2018 and BS 7671:2018+A2 specify minimum IP ratings for equipment based on its location. These are not suggestions — they are mandatory requirements.

AS/NZS 3000:2018, Table 4.4 — Minimum Degrees of Protection

Table 4.4 of the Australian/NZ Wiring Rules specifies minimum IP ratings by location type:

  • Dry indoor locations (domestic): IP2X minimum (finger-safe)
  • Outdoor locations, sheltered: IP23 minimum (protected against rain at 60°)
  • Outdoor locations, exposed: IP44 minimum, IP54 recommended
  • Wet locations (laundries, bathrooms Zone 2+): IP44 minimum
  • Bathrooms Zone 1: IPX4 minimum (IPX5 where water jets are used for cleaning)
  • Bathrooms Zone 0 (inside bath/shower): IPX7 minimum

BS 7671:2018+A2, Table 52.2 — External Influences

BS 7671 takes a different approach, classifying locations by "external influences" using a three-character code (e.g., AD4 = splashing water). Table 52.2 then maps each influence code to a minimum IP rating:

  • AD1 (negligible water): IPX0
  • AD2 (free-falling drops): IPX1 or IPX2
  • AD3 (spraying water): IPX3
  • AD4 (splashing water): IPX4
  • AD5 (water jets): IPX5
  • AD6 (waves): IPX6
  • AD7 (immersion): IPX7
  • AD8 (submersion): IPX8

The key lesson: you cannot just pick an IP rating based on personal preference. The standard mandates minimums based on environmental conditions, and the designer must assess those conditions for every location in the installation.

Common Mistakes Engineers Make with IP Ratings

Even experienced engineers fall into these traps:

  1. Assuming IP ratings survive installation: An IP65 enclosure is IP65 when it leaves the factory with all blanking plugs fitted and gaskets intact. The moment you drill a cable entry hole and forget to use a properly rated cable gland, the IP rating is void. Every penetration must maintain the enclosure's rated protection level.
  2. Ignoring the X placeholder: An "IPX4" rating means the enclosure has been tested for water protection (digit 4 = splash-proof) but has not been tested for solid object protection. The X is not a zero — it means "not tested." Similarly, "IP5X" means dust-protected but not tested for water. Always check both digits are present.
  3. Forgetting temperature and UV effects on gaskets: Rubber gaskets degrade over time, especially in direct sunlight (UV) and extreme heat. An enclosure that was IP65 when installed may lose its seal after five years of Australian sun. Specify UV-resistant gasket materials and include gasket replacement in maintenance schedules.
  4. Over-specifying and over-paying: Specifying IP68 for a sheltered indoor installation wastes money and makes maintenance harder (more seals to manage, heavier enclosures, more expensive cable entries). Match the IP rating to the actual environmental conditions, not worst-case paranoia.
  5. Confusing IP ratings with ATEX/Ex ratings: IP ratings do not cover explosive atmospheres. A dust-tight IP6X enclosure is not automatically suitable for combustible dust environments — that requires separate Ex (IECEx / ATEX) certification with entirely different testing criteria.

Selecting the Right IP Rating for Your Project

A practical decision process for selecting IP ratings:

  1. Assess the environment: Is the location indoor or outdoor? Sheltered or exposed? Subject to water jets, immersion, or just occasional splash? Is there dust, sand, or fibrous material?
  2. Check the standard: Look up the mandatory minimum from AS/NZS 3000 Table 4.4 or BS 7671 Table 52.2 (or your local equivalent). This is your floor — you cannot go below it.
  3. Consider maintenance access: Higher IP ratings mean harder access. If the enclosure needs frequent maintenance, an IP54 enclosure with proper drainage may be more practical than an IP66 enclosure that nobody can open without a torque wrench.
  4. Specify IK rating alongside IP: For any publicly accessible or industrial location, always specify an IK rating. IP65 IK08 is a sensible default for most outdoor commercial installations.
  5. Verify after installation: Check that all cable glands are correctly tightened, blanking plugs are in place, gaskets are seated, and no damage occurred during transport or installation. The IP rating is only as good as the weakest penetration.

IP ratings are deceptively simple — two digits that summarise a complex set of physical tests. Understanding what each digit means, knowing the standard minimums, and avoiding the common pitfalls puts you ahead of many practising engineers who treat IP ratings as afterthought specifications rather than critical design parameters.

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Frequently Asked Questions

IP54 is the practical minimum for general outdoor use. It provides dust protection and splash resistance from all directions. For exposed locations subject to rain or hose-down cleaning, IP55 or IP65 is more appropriate. AS/NZS 3000 requires IP44 minimum for exposed outdoor locations but recommends IP54.
IP65 is dust-tight and protected against water jets (6.3 mm nozzle at 12.5 L/min from 3 metres). IP67 is also dust-tight but additionally survives temporary immersion in water up to 1 metre depth for 30 minutes. Choose IP65 for enclosures that may be hosed down but never submerged. Choose IP67 for enclosures that may be temporarily flooded, such as ground-level junction boxes.
Not exactly. IP68 means the enclosure survives continuous immersion, but the specific depth and duration are defined by the manufacturer, not the standard. A luminaire rated IP68 at 1 metre depth may fail at 5 metres. Always check the manufacturer's stated conditions. Also, gaskets degrade over time, so IP68 performance requires regular maintenance.

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