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30 Mar, 2026
Posted by Main Switchboard
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What IP Rating Does a Switchboard Need?

Switchboards  April 2026  ·  6 min read

Choosing the right IP rating for a switchboard is a fundamental specification decision. Under-specify and the enclosure corrodes or lets in water. Over-specify and you are paying for protection the installation never needs. Here is a practical guide to getting it right for NZ conditions.

Switchboard IP rating guide NZ - Clive Wilson Switchboards

IP ratings follow the IEC 60529 standard, which defines how well an enclosure protects against the ingress of solid particles and water. Every switchboard supplied or manufactured by Clive Wilson Switchboards is rated to the correct IP level for its installation environment, in line with AS/NZS 3000 and AS/NZS 61439.

Understanding the IP Rating System

An IP rating has two digits. The first covers protection against solids and dust. The second covers water ingress. Higher numbers mean greater protection.

Digit What It Rates Range
First digit Solid objects and dust 0 (none) to 6 (dust-tight)
Second digit Water ingress 0 (none) to 9K (high-pressure hot jet)

In switchboard specification the most commonly used ratings are IP42, IP54, IP65, and IP66. The correct choice depends entirely on the installation environment.

IP Rating by Environment

Environment Minimum IP Recommended Typical NZ Applications
Clean indoor (office, commercial) IP41 IP42 Distribution boards, commercial fit-outs
Light industrial, dry IP42 IP54 Workshops, general manufacturing
Industrial with dust or splash IP54 IP55 Processing plants, factories
Dusty environment IP55 IP65 Grain, woodworking, mining
Outdoor, sheltered IP54 IP65 Covered plant rooms, car parks
Outdoor, exposed IP65 IP65 Pump stations, rural, water treatment
Coastal, exposed to sea spray IP65 IP66 Marine infrastructure, boat sheds
Dairy or food washdown IP65 IP66 Dairy farms, food processing

What the Key IP Levels Mean in Practice

IP54 – The Industrial Baseline

IP54 (dust protected, splash resistant from any direction) is the minimum for most NZ industrial switchboards. It is appropriate where occasional dust or water splash is possible but high-pressure hosing does not occur. It is not adequate for dairy farms, food processing, or any environment with regular direct hosing.

IP65 – Standard for Outdoor and Washdown

IP65 (fully dust-tight, protected against low-pressure water jets from any direction) is the correct standard for most outdoor NZ installations and for indoor areas where routine hosing takes place. It is the default recommendation for pump stations, rural installations, and covered plant rooms that are hosed down as part of routine cleaning.

IP66 – High Pressure and Marine

IP66 provides protection against powerful water jets (100 L/min at 100 kPa) versus IP65 (12.5 L/min at 30 kPa). Specify IP66 for dairy and food processing facilities, for enclosures exposed to sea spray or wave action, and for any site where high-pressure hosing is part of routine operations.

Standards and Legal Obligations

Under AS/NZS 3000, all electrical equipment must be suitable for the environment in which it is installed. Under AS/NZS 61439, the switchboard designer and manufacturer are both responsible for ensuring the correct ingress protection is specified and achieved. These obligations cannot be delegated to the installer alone.

One critical point: the IP rating applies to the enclosure body only. Cable entries must be sealed with correctly sized cable glands to achieve the stated IP level. An unsealed gland reduces effective protection to IP00 regardless of the enclosure rating. This is the most common compliance failure we encounter during site inspections.

Coastal NZ note: Salt air accelerates corrosion on both the enclosure body and internal components. Within 500 metres of the coast, specify a minimum IP65 enclosure in 316 stainless steel or GRP. Standard mild steel powder-coated enclosures corrode rapidly in marine atmospheres even when sealed to IP65.

Common Specification Errors

  • Unsealed cable entries — the most common error; a single unsealed gland eliminates the enclosure IP rating
  • IP54 in washdown areas — high-pressure hosing penetrates IP54 over time; IP66 is the minimum for these environments
  • Wrong material for coastal sites — mild steel powder coat corrodes in marine atmospheres regardless of IP rating
  • Site-drilled holes without resealing — modifications that add penetrations without correct glands void the IP rating entirely
  • No thermal management in sealed outdoor enclosures — a sealed IP65 enclosure in direct sun can reach temperatures that damage equipment without ventilation or insulation

Related reading:

Talk to us about IP rating and enclosure specification for your NZ project

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