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Bathroom Electrical Zones — IP Ratings, Zone 1/2/3 Compliance, and Safe Products for UK Electricians

Bathroom Electrical Zones — IP Ratings, Zone 1/2/3 Compliance, and Safe Products for UK Electricians

Bathrooms are the most regulated room in a UK home for electrical installations. Water and electricity are a lethal combination, and BS 7671 18th Edition (Regulation 701) divides the bathroom into specific zones, each with strict minimum IP ratings and permitted wiring methods. Get this wrong and you risk failed inspections, insurance voidance, and serious harm to the occupant.

This guide explains the bathroom zone system, what you can and cannot install in each zone, and how to select the right products for safe, compliant bathroom electrical work.

Why Bathrooms Are Treated Differently

The electrical hazard in bathrooms comes from two sources: direct contact with water and reduced body resistance when wet. A person standing in a wet bath has significantly lower skin resistance than normal, meaning even low voltages can cause ventricular fibrillation. BS 7671 Regulation 701 exists specifically to mitigate this risk through zoning, supplementary bonding, and RCD protection.

All circuits in a bathroom must be protected by a 30mA RCD, with no exceptions. This applies to every circuit — lighting, shaver sockets, extractor fans, and dedicated shower supplies. Even if a socket or fitting is physically outside the zones, if it supplies a product used in the bathroom it must be RCD protected.

The Three Bathroom Zones Explained

Zone 0 — Inside the Bath or Shower Tray

Zone 0 is the interior of the bath or shower enclosure — the area directly occupied by water during use. This zone extends from the floor to a height of 0.10m (10cm) above the highest water level, or the highest point of the shower tray if applicable.

What is permitted in Zone 0:

  • Only SELV (Separated Extra Low Voltage) equipment rated at 12V AC or 25V DC maximum
  • IP67 or better — the product must withstand temporary immersion
  • Typical products: 12V IP68 waterproof LED strip lighting designed specifically for wet use

What is not permitted in Zone 0:

  • Mains voltage fittings of any type
  • Switches or controls
  • Accessories of any kind unless specifically rated SELV IP67+

In practice, Zone 0 is rarely populated with electrical fittings. Most bathroom LED schemes use Zone 1 rated products mounted just above the bath rim or shower threshold.

Zone 1 — Above the Bath or Shower Tray

Zone 1 extends from the floor to 2.25m above it (or the top of the shower head if higher), and horizontally to the edge of the bath rim or shower tray perimeter. This is the area of direct water contact during showering and bathing.

What is permitted in Zone 1:

  • SELV at 12V AC / 25V DC, or
  • Mains voltage equipment specifically rated for Zone 1 use with minimum IP44
  • Typical Zone 1 products: IP65 downlights, shower light fittings, electric showers (supplied via dedicated 6–10mm² T&E, protected by RCBO)

What is not permitted in Zone 1:

  • Socket outlets (13A or otherwise)
  • Switches (except pull-cord types where the cord hangs into Zone 1 from a switch body in Zone 2)
  • Consumer units, junction boxes, or cable joints

The 2.25m height limit means most ceiling-mounted downlights over a bath or shower are technically in Zone 1, not Zone 2. Always measure from the floor — don't assume "ceiling level" puts a fitting outside Zone 1.

Zone 2 — The Splash Zone

Zone 2 extends 0.6m beyond the edge of the bath or shower tray (horizontally) and from 0m to 2.25m above the floor. It also covers the area between the perimeter of Zone 1 and this 0.6m boundary. Essentially, it's the area likely to receive spray or splashed water during normal use.

What is permitted in Zone 2:

  • Products with minimum IP44 rating
  • Shaver sockets — but only BS EN 61558-2-5 approved types (the double-wound isolation transformer type, not a standard socket)
  • Extractor fans (minimum IP44 if positioned in Zone 2; IP65 recommended)
  • Heated towel rail connections (FCU with double-pole isolation in Zone 2 or outside)

What is not permitted in Zone 2:

  • Standard 13A socket outlets
  • Light switches (only pull-cords permitted in Zones 1 and 2)
  • Consumer units or distribution boards

Outside the Zones — General Area

The area of the bathroom beyond 0.6m from the bath/shower edge and above 2.25m is not subject to zone restrictions, but remains subject to the 30mA RCD requirement and supplementary bonding rules. Standard 13A sockets, rocker light switches, and standard fittings are permitted here, provided they are RCD protected.

Many electricians conservatively treat the entire bathroom as Zone 2, fitting IP44 or IP65 throughout. This is a common and sensible approach when uncertain about zone boundaries.

IP Rating Explained

IP (Ingress Protection) ratings are defined by IEC 60529 and consist of two digits: the first relates to solid particle protection (dust, fingers), the second to liquid ingress:

IP Rating Liquid Protection Level Bathroom Zone Suitability
IP20 No liquid protection Outside zones only (general areas)
IP44 Splash-proof from any direction Minimum for Zone 1 and Zone 2
IP65 Jet-proof (low pressure) Suitable for all zones (not immersion)
IP67 Temporary immersion (1m/30 min) Suitable for Zone 0
IP68 Continuous immersion (specified depth) Zone 0 submersed applications

For bathroom downlights, IP65 is the industry standard choice — it comfortably satisfies Zone 1 requirements and provides a margin of safety. IP44 is technically compliant for Zones 1 and 2 but offers less protection; many manufacturers have moved their bathroom ranges to IP65 as standard.

Supplementary Bonding

Regulation 701.415.2 requires supplementary equipotential bonding between simultaneously accessible metal parts in a bathroom — extraneous and exposed conductive parts that could simultaneously be touched. This includes:

  • Metal pipework (hot and cold supply pipes, waste pipes if metal)
  • Metal baths, shower trays, radiators
  • Exposed metalwork of fixed electrical equipment

The bonding conductor must be a minimum 4mm² copper core, connected to a main bonding clamp or the MET via appropriate saddle clamps.

Exception: Supplementary bonding in a bathroom may be omitted if all circuits serving the bathroom are protected by a 30mA RCD and the premises has a TNCS (PME) supply with properly sized main protective bonding throughout, and no metal pipework penetrates the bathroom from outside without bonding at the main board level. Most modern installations qualify for this exemption, but it must be formally assessed by the electrician and recorded on the Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC).

Electric Showers — Zone Compliance

Electric showers are Zone 1 products by definition — they are mounted on the shower wall and used directly with water. Requirements for electric shower installation:

  • Dedicated circuit from consumer unit — 8.5kW showers typically need 40A MCB/RCBO with 6mm² T&E (check volt drop for longer cable runs)
  • 10kW+ showers typically need 45A or 50A protection with 10mm² T&E
  • The circuit must be protected by a 30mA RCD (an RCBO at the board is the cleanest solution)
  • The unit must be Zone 1 rated — all electric showers from reputable manufacturers are, but always check the IP rating on the data plate
  • A separate double-pole isolator switch must be fitted outside the zone (pull-cord types available for Zone 2 positioning)

Extractor Fans

Mechanical ventilation is required by Building Regulations Part F in bathrooms and shower rooms without openable windows (and in many cases with windows too). Key requirements:

  • Minimum 15 litres/second extract rate for bathrooms, 30 litres/second for wet rooms
  • Must be connected to a 30mA RCD protected circuit
  • If positioned in Zone 2 (within 0.6m of the bath/shower edge or below 2.25m), must be IP44 or better
  • May be wired to the bathroom light circuit (switches off when light goes off) or to a dedicated 5A circuit with overrun timer — see our guide to ventilation ducting and extract systems
  • Humidistat-controlled fans: wired to 5A unswitched supply — switch the fan independently from the light

Heated Towel Rails

Electric heated towel rails should be connected via a fused spur (FCU) with double-pole isolation, not a plug-and-socket connection (no 13A sockets permitted in Zone 1 or Zone 2). The FCU and wiring arrangement:

  • FCU rated at 3A (sufficient for all standard electric towel rails up to ~600W)
  • FCU positioned outside the zones if possible — in Zone 2 if the bathroom layout requires it (IP44 rated switched FCU required)
  • Circuit protected by 30mA RCD
  • Dual-fuel towel rails: use the same FCU for the electric element; the central heating connection is via the plumbing circuit

Bathroom Lighting — Zone-by-Zone Selection

Lighting is the area where most bathroom electrical errors occur. The ceiling above a bath or shower is often Zone 1 — measured from the floor, not the fitting position.

Ceiling downlights above bath/shower: IP65 minimum. Fire-rated versions recommended where downlights penetrate the floor/ceiling void. The fire-rated spring clips seal the aperture and restore the 30-minute fire rating of the ceiling.

Ceiling downlights outside zones: IP20 or IP44 acceptable, IP44 recommended throughout for uniformity and future-proofing.

Bulkhead lights: Commonly fitted on the wall in Zone 2 — minimum IP44, IP65 preferred. Ensure the supply cable enters from outside the zone or is fully enclosed in conduit within the zone.

Mirror lights: Most bathroom mirror lights are designed for Zone 2 at minimum IP44. Shaver sockets built into mirror units must be the BS EN 61558-2-5 isolation transformer type — never a standard socket.

Common Bathroom Wiring Faults Found on EICR

When completing Electrical Installation Condition Reports (EICR) in domestic properties, bathroom defects are among the most frequently coded C2 (potentially dangerous) items:

  • No 30mA RCD protection: Older installations often have bathroom circuits on non-RCD ways. Code C2 — rectify by adding a dedicated RCBO or moving to an RCD-protected way.
  • IP20 light fittings in Zone 1/2: Non-IP rated pendant lights above baths are extremely common in older properties. Code C2 — replace with IP65 downlights or batten holders.
  • 13A socket outlets in Zone 2: Still found in bathrooms installed before the current regulations. Code C2 — remove and blank-off or replace with shaver socket.
  • No supplementary bonding (where required): Code C2 in older installations where RCD protection is also absent. Where full RCD protection exists and main bonding is correct, bonding may be omitted — document the justification.
  • Light switch in Zone 1/2: Rocker switches inside the zones are not permitted. Replace with pull-cord or relocate to outside the zones.

Part P Notification

Bathroom electrical work is notifiable under Part P of the Building Regulations (England and Wales) when it involves:

  • Installing new circuits
  • Consumer unit replacement
  • Adding or moving socket outlets or lighting points in a bathroom

The exception is like-for-like replacement of an existing fitting in the same position (e.g. replacing a light fitting with the same type in the same location) — this is not notifiable. Any new wiring or change in circuit routing is notifiable.

Competent Person Scheme members (NICEIC, ELECSA, NAPIT, STROMA) can self-certify. Non-registered electricians must notify the local authority building control before work commences.

Product Selection Guide

When specifying bathroom electrical products, prioritise:

  • IP65 LED downlights: Fire-rated for ceiling void applications; GU10 lamp type for easy replacement; CCT-switchable for flexibility on install day
  • IP65 bulkheads: LED integrated types for longevity; check maintained vs non-maintained emergency function requirements (commercial bathrooms)
  • Dual-pole isolation switches: Pull-cord DP switches for shower and fan circuits positioned at Zone 2 boundary
  • 30mA RCBOs: Dedicated RCBO per bathroom circuit is the cleanest solution — no shared RCD tripping adjacent circuits
  • Shaver sockets: BS EN 61558-2-5 compliant isolation transformer type; single or dual voltage (115V/230V) for travel shavers

Recommended Products for Bathroom Electrical Compliance

Integral LED IP65 Fire Rated Downlight

Integral LED IP65 Fire Rated Downlight 70mm 6W 4000K

View Product
AXIOM Mini RCBO 16A 30mA Type B

AXIOM Mini RCBO 16A 30mA DP Type B — Bathroom Circuit Protection

View Product
Knightsbridge IP65 LED Bulkhead

Knightsbridge 230V IP65 4W LED Emergency Bulkhead

View Product
MK Electric K701 Dual Voltage Shaver Socket

MK Electric K701 Dual Voltage Shaver Socket 115V/230V White

View Product

Summary Checklist for Bathroom Electrical Compliance

  • ☑ All circuits in the bathroom on 30mA RCD protection
  • ☑ Zone 0: SELV 12V/25V only, IP67 minimum
  • ☑ Zone 1: IP44 minimum for mains voltage; no sockets, no switches
  • ☑ Zone 2: IP44 minimum; shaver sockets (isolation transformer type only); no 13A sockets
  • ☑ Supplementary bonding assessed and applied (or documented exemption recorded)
  • ☑ Electric shower on dedicated RCBO protected circuit, appropriately sized cable
  • ☑ Extractor fan meeting Part F extract rates, RCD protected
  • ☑ Part P notification made (or self-certification under Competent Person Scheme)
  • ☑ EIC issued on completion for new circuits; EICR code corrected and signed off

For LED downlights, RCBOs, pull-cord switches, and shaver sockets, browse APM Electricals' range at apmi.uk. We stock IP65 fire-rated downlights, Axiom and MK RCBOs, and a full range of bathroom wiring accessories suitable for Zone 1 and Zone 2 compliance.

Visit us at APM Electricals, 31 Inglis Road, London, W5 3RL. Call 020 8819 5852.


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APM Electricals
24 Western Avenue, Acton, London W3 7TZ
Phone: 020 8702 8080
www.apmi.uk

Trade counter open Monday–Friday. Same-day collection available on stocked items.

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