BS 7671:2018+A2 — IET Wiring Regulations Overview
Comprehensive overview of BS 7671:2018+A2 (IET Wiring Regulations, 18th Edition), the UK national standard for electrical installations. Covers key appendices, installation methods, current ratings, amendments, and cable sizing methodology.
What is BS 7671?
BS 7671:2018+A2, commonly known as the IET Wiring Regulations or the 18th Edition, is the national standard in the United Kingdom for the design, erection, and verification of electrical installations. Published jointly by the British Standards Institution (BSI) and the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET), it is the fundamental reference for all electrical installation work in the UK, and is widely adopted in many countries that follow British electrical practice.
BS 7671 covers the complete scope of an electrical installation — from maximum demand assessment through cable selection, protection coordination, earthing arrangements, and inspection and testing. For cable sizing specifically, Appendix 4 provides the current-carrying capacity tables, derating factors, and voltage drop data that form the basis of all cable selection calculations.
The standard is based on IEC 60364 (Low-voltage electrical installations) and the European harmonisation document HD 60364, with UK-specific modifications and additions. This IEC heritage means that engineers familiar with BS 7671 can readily work with IEC 60364 installations, as the fundamental methodology is shared.
Key Tables and Appendices for Cable Sizing
The cable sizing provisions of BS 7671 are concentrated in Appendix 4. The key tables are:
| Table | Purpose | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Table 4A2 | Installation methods (A1, A2, B1, B2, C, D1, D2, E, F, G) | First step: identify how the cable is physically installed |
| Table 4B1 | Rating factors for ambient air temperature | When ambient differs from 30°C reference |
| Table 4B2 | Rating factors for ground temperature | When ground temperature differs from 20°C reference |
| Tables 4C1–4C5 | Rating factors for grouping (bunching) | Multiple circuits in same enclosure or on same tray |
| Table 4D1A | Current ratings — single-core PVC/thermoplastic | PVC (70°C) single-core cable sizing |
| Table 4D2A | Current ratings — multicore PVC/thermoplastic | PVC (70°C) multicore cable sizing |
| Table 4D3A | Current ratings — single-core XLPE/thermosetting | XLPE (90°C) single-core cable sizing |
| Table 4D4A | Current ratings — multicore XLPE/thermosetting | XLPE (90°C) multicore cable sizing |
| Table 4D5A | Current ratings — MI (mineral insulated) cables | MICC cable sizing |
| Tables 4E1A–4E4A | Voltage drop per ampere per metre (mV/A/m) | Verifying voltage drop within Table 4Ab limits |
| Table 4Ab | Maximum voltage drop limits | Determining allowable voltage drop percentage |
Installation Methods
BS 7671 Table 4A2 defines installation methods using an alphanumeric code system derived from IEC 60364:
| Method | Description | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|
| A1 | Single-core cables in conduit in a thermally insulated wall | Domestic installations, insulated partition walls |
| A2 | Multicore cable in conduit in a thermally insulated wall | Domestic installations, insulated partition walls |
| B1 | Single-core cables in conduit on a wall or in trunking | Surface-mounted conduit, commercial premises |
| B2 | Multicore cable in conduit on a wall or in trunking | Surface-mounted conduit, commercial premises |
| C | Cable clipped direct to a surface | Industrial cable runs, surface-clipped SWA cables |
| D1 | Multicore cable in underground ducts | External underground routes, road crossings |
| D2 | Multicore cable buried direct in the ground | Direct-buried external cables |
| E | Cable in free air on perforated tray (horizontal) | Industrial cable management, plant rooms |
| F | Cable in free air on tray (touching, trefoil) | Single-core cables grouped on tray |
| G | Cable spaced in free air | Maximum cooling, busbars, switchroom risers |
Methods A1/A2 have the lowest current ratings due to the combined thermal insulation effect of the wall and conduit. Method G (spaced in free air) has the highest ratings. The difference can be dramatic: a 10 mm² copper PVC cable is rated at 43 A in method A1 but 76 A in method E — a 77% increase.
Reference Conditions
BS 7671 current rating tables are calculated for specific reference conditions:
| Parameter | BS 7671 Reference | Compared to AS/NZS 3008 |
|---|---|---|
| Ambient air temperature | 30°C | AS/NZS uses 40°C |
| Ground temperature | 20°C | AS/NZS uses 25°C |
| Soil thermal resistivity | 2.5 K·m/W | AS/NZS uses 1.2 K·m/W |
| Grouping | Single circuit | Same |
| Thermal insulation | No contact | Same |
The 30°C reference ambient is significant: in the UK, ambient temperatures rarely exceed 30°C, so derating for temperature is uncommon. However, in warmer climates or enclosed spaces (such as roof voids in summer), the ambient may exceed 30°C and temperature derating becomes necessary.
Conversely, the BS 7671 soil thermal resistivity reference of 2.5 K·m/W is conservative (dry soil), which means that in areas with moist or clay soil (resistivity <2.5), a derating factor greater than 1.0 can be applied, effectively increasing the cable's current rating.
Amendments to the 18th Edition
BS 7671:2018 has been updated through a series of amendments:
- Amendment 1 (2020): Corrections and clarifications to the original 2018 text. Updates to Chapter 44 (Protection against voltage disturbances) and Chapter 55 (Other equipment).
- Amendment 2 (2022): More substantive changes including updated requirements for electric vehicle charging installations (Section 722), energy efficiency provisions (Part 8), and prosumer installations (Section 763 — solar PV, battery storage, EV to grid). Also updated Appendix 17 for energy efficiency recommendations.
The current version is cited as BS 7671:2018+A2:2022. When referencing the standard, it is important to specify the amendment level to ensure the correct requirements are applied.
The next major revision is anticipated around 2026–2027, which is expected to align more closely with the latest IEC 60364 and HD 60364 updates, particularly regarding arc fault detection devices (AFDDs), energy storage systems, and DC installations.
Relationship to IEC 60364
BS 7671 is the UK national implementation of the IEC 60364 series (Low-voltage electrical installations), harmonised through the European CENELEC process as HD 60364. The relationship is:
- IEC 60364: International base standard published by IEC Technical Committee 64
- HD 60364: European harmonisation document (CENELEC), incorporating IEC 60364 with European modifications
- BS 7671: UK national standard, based on HD 60364 with UK-specific additions (especially in cable sizing tables and UK cable types)
The installation method designations (A1, B1, C, D, E, F, G) are shared between BS 7671 and IEC 60364-5-52, making it easy to cross-reference calculations between the two standards. However, the specific current rating values may differ because BS 7671 includes UK-specific cable constructions (notably flat twin-and-earth and mineral-insulated copper cables) that are not in the IEC tables.
For engineers working on international projects, understanding this hierarchy is valuable: a design compliant with BS 7671 will generally satisfy IEC 60364 requirements, though local national deviations may apply.
Essential BS 7671 Tables for Cable Sizing
Professional cable sizing to BS 7671 requires access to the complete dataset:
- All 10 installation methods from Table 4A2 (A1 through G)
- Current rating tables 4D1A through 4D5A for PVC, XLPE, and MI cables
- Temperature derating from Table 4B1 (air) and 4B2 (ground)
- Grouping factors from Tables 4C1 through 4C5
- Voltage drop values from Tables 4E1A through 4E4A
- Voltage drop limit checking against Table 4Ab
Results should include specific BS 7671 table and clause references so each value can be verified against the physical standard.
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