IEC 60364 Complete Guide — Scope, Structure & All Parts Explained
Understand IEC 60364 series structure across all parts (1-7). Practical overview for design engineers. By a field engineer with 18+ years experience.
What is IEC 60364?
IEC 60364 — Low-voltage electrical installations — is the international standard series published by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) Technical Committee 64 (TC 64). It is the foundation upon which most national electrical installation standards around the world are built, including:
- BS 7671 (United Kingdom) — via European harmonisation document HD 60364
- AS/NZS 3000 + AS/NZS 3008 (Australia/New Zealand) — technical alignment with IEC 60364 methodology
- National standards in Europe, Asia, Africa, South America, and the Middle East — most adopt IEC 60364 directly or with national modifications
Unlike the NEC (which follows a prescriptive, US-specific approach), IEC 60364 is designed to be adopted internationally with national annexes for local conditions. This makes it the world's most widely referenced electrical installation standard framework.
The series covers the complete lifecycle of a low-voltage electrical installation: fundamental principles, design requirements, protection measures, equipment selection, and verification procedures. It applies to installations operating at voltages up to 1000 V AC or 1500 V DC.
The Seven-Part Structure of IEC 60364
IEC 60364 is organised into seven main parts, each addressing a distinct aspect of electrical installation design and practice:
| Part | Title | Key Content |
|---|---|---|
| Part 1 | Fundamental principles | Scope, definitions, and general objectives of the standard series. Defines the boundary between the supply network and the installation. |
| Part 2 | Definitions | Comprehensive glossary of terms used throughout the series. Essential for resolving ambiguity — for example, the precise definition of "circuit" vs "final circuit" vs "distribution circuit". |
| Part 3 | Assessment of general characteristics | How to assess the external influences (ambient temperature, humidity, altitude, vibration, etc.) that affect installation design. Also covers supply characteristics and load assessment. |
| Part 4 | Protection for safety | The core safety requirements: protection against electric shock (4-41), thermal effects (4-42), overcurrent (4-43), and fault current (4-44). This is the part most frequently referenced in design calculations. |
| Part 5 | Selection and erection of equipment | How to select and install wiring systems (5-51), cables (5-52), devices for protection and isolation (5-53), and earthing (5-54). Part 5-52 is the primary cable sizing reference. |
| Part 6 | Verification | Initial verification (inspection and testing) procedures and periodic verification. Specifies the tests that must be performed before an installation is energised. |
| Part 7 | Requirements for special installations | Additional requirements for specific installation types: bathrooms (7-701), swimming pools (7-702), medical locations (7-710), solar PV (7-712), EV charging (7-722), and many others. |
Each part is published as a separate document (e.g., IEC 60364-4-41, IEC 60364-5-52), and each may be on a different revision cycle. Engineers must ensure they are using the current edition of each part relevant to their project.
Part 4-43 vs Part 4-41: Overcurrent Protection vs Shock Protection
Two sections of Part 4 are central to cable sizing and protection coordination. Understanding the distinction is essential:
Part 4-41: Protection Against Electric Shock
IEC 60364-4-41:2005+A1:2017 defines how to protect people from electric shock through two mechanisms:
- Basic protection (protection against direct contact): Insulation of live parts, barriers and enclosures (IP2X minimum), obstacles and placing out of reach.
- Fault protection (protection against indirect contact): Automatic disconnection of supply within specified times. This is where earth fault loop impedance (Zs) calculations become critical — the protective device must disconnect within 0.4 s for 230 V final circuits or 5 s for distribution circuits.
Maximum disconnection times (IEC 60364-4-41, Table 41.1):
System type Uo (V) Final circuit (s) Distribution (s)
TN 120 0.8 5
TN 230 0.4 5
TN 400 0.2 5
TT 120 0.3 1
TT 230 0.2 1
TT 400 0.07 1
Part 4-43: Protection Against Overcurrent
IEC 60364-4-43:2008+A1:2011 defines how to protect conductors and cables from damage due to overcurrent (overload and short circuit). The two key requirements are:
- Overload protection (Clause 433): The protective device must satisfy two conditions simultaneously:
Condition 1: I_b ≤ I_n ≤ I_z
Condition 2: I_2 ≤ 1.45 × I_z
Where:
I_b = design current of the circuit
I_n = rated current of the protective device
I_z = current-carrying capacity of the cable (derated)
I_2 = current ensuring effective operation of the protective device
- Short-circuit protection (Clause 434): The protective device must disconnect before the cable exceeds its thermal withstand limit. This is verified using the adiabatic equation:
Adiabatic equation: t ≤ (k × S / I)²
Where:
t = disconnection time of the protective device (s)
k = cable constant (115 for PVC/Cu, 143 for XLPE/Cu)
S = conductor cross-sectional area (mm²)
I = prospective short-circuit current (A)
In practice, Part 4-41 determines the maximum time for disconnection (to protect people), while Part 4-43 determines the minimum cable size to survive the fault (to protect property). Both must be satisfied simultaneously.
Part 5-52: Cable Selection and Installation
IEC 60364-5-52:2009+A2:2024 is the primary cable sizing reference in the IEC system. It is the international equivalent of Appendix 4 of BS 7671 or AS/NZS 3008. It provides:
- Table B.52.1: Reference installation methods (A1, A2, B1, B2, C, D, E, F, G) — the same alphanumeric codes used by BS 7671.
- Tables B.52.2 through B.52.14: Current-carrying capacity for copper and aluminium conductors with PVC (70°C) and XLPE (90°C) insulation, for each installation method.
- Table B.52.15: Ambient temperature correction factors (reference: 30°C air, 20°C ground).
- Tables B.52.17 through B.52.21: Grouping (proximity) correction factors for various configurations.
- Table B.52.16: Soil thermal resistivity correction factors (reference: 2.5 K·m/W).
The cable sizing methodology follows the same fundamental approach used worldwide:
- Determine design current Ib
- Select protective device rating In ≥ Ib
- Identify installation method from Table B.52.1
- Calculate total derating factor: Ctotal = Ctemp × Cgroup × Csoil × ...
- Determine minimum cable rating: Iz ≥ In / Ctotal
- Select cable from appropriate current rating table
- Verify voltage drop ≤ allowable limit
| IEC 60364-5-52 Reference Conditions | Value |
|---|---|
| Ambient air temperature | 30°C |
| Ground temperature | 20°C |
| Soil thermal resistivity | 2.5 K·m/W |
| Depth of burial | 0.7 m |
| Conductor operating temperature (PVC) | 70°C |
| Conductor operating temperature (XLPE) | 90°C |
Part 5-54: Earthing Arrangements and Protective Conductors
IEC 60364-5-54:2011 defines the requirements for earthing arrangements and protective conductor sizing. It is referenced whenever the earth fault loop impedance or protective conductor size needs to be determined.
Key provisions include:
- Clause 542.3: Minimum cross-sectional area of protective conductors. The standard provides two methods — a simplified table (Table 54.1) based on line conductor size, or the adiabatic calculation method for precise sizing:
Protective conductor minimum size (Table 54.1):
Line conductor S (mm²) Min. protective conductor (mm²)
S ≤ 16 S (same size as line)
16 < S ≤ 35 16
S > 35 S/2
Adiabatic method:
S_pe = (I² × t)^0.5 / k
Where:
S_pe = protective conductor area (mm²)
I = fault current (A)
t = disconnection time (s)
k = material constant (Table 54.2-54.6)
- Clause 542.4: Types of earthing arrangements (TN-S, TN-C, TN-C-S, TT, IT) and the specific requirements for each. The earthing system type determines the fault current path and therefore the disconnection time requirements from Part 4-41.
- Clause 543: Earth electrode requirements, including minimum dimensions for copper, steel, and galvanised earth rods, and measurement procedures for earth electrode resistance.
- Clause 544: Equipotential bonding conductor sizing — main bonding and supplementary bonding requirements.
Part 5-54 works in conjunction with Part 4-41: the earthing arrangement determines the fault current magnitude and path, Part 4-41 specifies the required disconnection time, and Part 5-54 ensures the protective conductor can carry the fault current for that duration without exceeding its thermal limits.
Part 6: Verification — Initial Verification Checklist
IEC 60364-6:2016 specifies the inspection and testing procedures that must be carried out before an installation (or modification) is put into service. The verification sequence is critical — tests must be performed in the correct order because some tests can damage equipment if done before preceding tests have confirmed safety.
The prescribed test sequence for initial verification:
- Visual inspection: Verify correct equipment ratings, connections, cable identification, accessibility of isolators, presence of warning labels, and compliance with design documentation.
- Continuity of protective conductors (Clause 6.4.3.2): Low-resistance ohmmeter test (≤200 mA DC) to confirm all protective conductors are continuous. Includes main bonding, supplementary bonding, and circuit protective conductors.
- Insulation resistance (Clause 6.4.3.3): Test at 500 V DC for LV circuits (250 V DC for SELV/PELV). Minimum acceptable: 1.0 MΩ (0.5 MΩ for SELV). Tested between:
- Line to Neutral
- Line to Earth
- Neutral to Earth
- SELV/PELV separation (Clause 6.4.3.4): If applicable, verify separation from other circuits and from earth.
- Floor and wall resistance (Clause 6.4.3.5): For IT systems relying on non-conducting locations.
- Polarity (Clause 6.4.3.6): Confirm single-pole switches are in the line conductor, not neutral.
- Earth electrode resistance (Clause 6.4.3.7): For TT and IT systems, measure the earth electrode resistance to confirm it is low enough for the protective device to operate within required times.
- Earth fault loop impedance (Clause 6.4.3.8): Measure Zs at the furthest point of each circuit and verify it is within the maximum values for the installed protective device type and rating.
- RCD testing (Clause 6.4.3.9): Functional test (test button) and instrument test at rated residual current. 30 mA RCDs must trip within 300 ms at IΔn and within 40 ms at 5×IΔn.
| Test | Instrument | Pass Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Continuity (R1+R2) | Low-resistance ohmmeter | Consistent low readings; compare with design values |
| Insulation resistance | Insulation resistance tester (500 V DC) | ≥ 1.0 MΩ (each circuit) |
| Earth fault loop impedance | Loop impedance tester | Zs ≤ Zs(max) from Part 4-41 tables |
| RCD operation (30 mA) | RCD tester | Trips within 300 ms at IΔn; ≤ 40 ms at 5×IΔn |
| Prospective fault current | PFC meter or loop tester | Within rating of installed protective devices |
Cross-Reference Map: IEC 60364 to AS/NZS 3000 and BS 7671
Engineers working across jurisdictions need to map between the three main standard families. The following cross-reference covers the most commonly accessed provisions:
| Topic | IEC 60364 | BS 7671:2018+A4 | AS/NZS 3000:2018 + AS/NZS 3008 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shock protection (disconnection times) | 4-41, Table 41.1 | Regulation 411, Table 41.1 | Clause 5.8, Table 8.2 |
| Overcurrent protection | 4-43, Clause 433 | Regulation 433 | Clause 2.5 |
| Cable sizing (current ratings) | 5-52, Tables B.52.2–B.52.14 | Appendix 4, Tables 4D1A–4D5A | AS/NZS 3008, Tables 13–15 |
| Installation methods | 5-52, Table B.52.1 | Table 4A2 | AS/NZS 3008, Table 3 |
| Temperature derating | 5-52, Table B.52.15 | Tables 4B1, 4B2 | AS/NZS 3008, Tables 22, 23 |
| Grouping derating | 5-52, Tables B.52.17–B.52.21 | Tables 4C1–4C5 | AS/NZS 3008, Table 25 |
| Voltage drop | 5-52, Clause 525 | Appendix 4, Tables 4E1A–4E4A | AS/NZS 3008, Tables 30–42 |
| Protective conductor sizing | 5-54, Table 54.1 | Table 54.7 | AS/NZS 3000, Table 5.1 |
| Earthing system types | 3, Clause 312 | Part 2, Definitions | Clause 5.1 |
| Initial verification | 6, Clause 6.4 | Part 6, Regulation 643 | AS/NZS 3000, Section 8 |
| Solar PV installations | 7-712 | Chapter 72 (A4) | AS/NZS 5033 |
| EV charging | 7-722 | Section 722 | AS/NZS 3000 Clause 4.14 |
Which Parts Apply to Your Installation?
Not every project requires every part of IEC 60364. The following guide helps identify which parts are relevant:
- Every installation: Parts 1, 2, 3 (fundamentals), Part 4-41 (shock), Part 4-43 (overcurrent), Part 5-52 (cable sizing), Part 5-54 (earthing), Part 6 (verification).
- Installations with motors: Add Part 5-52 (motor cable sizing), Part 4-43 (starting current considerations), and relevant Part 7 section if in a special location.
- Installations with generators or UPS: Add Part 5-51 (switching and isolation) and Part 3 (assessment of supply characteristics including fault level).
- Solar PV installations: Add Part 7-712.
- EV charging installations: Add Part 7-722.
- Medical locations (hospitals, clinics): Add Part 7-710.
- Bathrooms and wet areas: Add Part 7-701.
- Swimming pools: Add Part 7-702.
- Marinas and boat moorings: Add Part 7-709.
- Temporary installations (events, construction): Add Part 7-711 (exhibitions) or Part 7-704 (construction sites).
ECalPro's calculators automatically reference the relevant IEC 60364 part numbers in calculation reports, so the applicable standard clauses are always traceable.
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Related Resources
BS 7671 Overview
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