Professional electrical engineering services include electrical safety compliance as one of their most critical offerings. For UK businesses, navigating the landscape of electrical safety legislation, standards, and best practice is complex and demanding. Non-compliance is not a minor administrative issue it carries legal liability, insurance consequences, and serious safety risks. This step-by-step guide explains everything UK businesses need to know.
Step 1: Understand Your Legal Framework
UK businesses are subject to several pieces of legislation governing electrical safety:
• Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 imposes a duty to ensure electrical systems are maintained to prevent danger
• Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 general duty of care for employees and visitors
• BS 7671 (18th Edition) the technical standard for electrical installations
• Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998 (PUWER) covers portable electrical equipment
• The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 includes electrical fire risk
Step 2: Commission an Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR)
An EICR is the cornerstone of electrical compliance for commercial premises. It assesses the condition of your existing electrical installation against the current edition of BS 7671 and identifies any defects, deterioration, or non-compliances. EICRs should be conducted:
• Every 5 years for most commercial premises
• On change of occupancy or before taking on a new lease
• After any significant electrical work
• Immediately if there are concerns about the installation’s condition
Step 3: Implement a Portable Appliance Testing (PAT) Programme
PAT testing ensures that portable electrical equipment in your workplace is safe. While there is no legally specified frequency for PAT testing, the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) expects employers to ensure all electrical equipment is maintained in a safe condition. A risk-based approach determines testing intervals.
Step 4: Maintain Your Fixed Wiring System
Beyond formal EICRs, ongoing maintenance is essential. This includes:
• Regular visual inspection of distribution boards, switches, and sockets
• Thermal imaging surveys of switchgear to detect hot joints
• Testing of RCDs and MCBs for correct operation
• Checking cable containment for physical damage
• Verifying earthing and bonding connections are secure
Step 5: Document Everything
Compliance without documentation is worthless. Maintain comprehensive records of:
• All EICRs and test certificates
• PAT testing records
• Maintenance logs and inspection reports
• Certificates for all electrical installation work carried out
• Evidence of corrective actions taken following inspection findings
|
Compliance Activity |
Frequency |
Legal Basis |
Who Should Conduct It |
|
EICR |
Every 5 years (commercial) |
Electricity at Work Regs 1989 |
Qualified electrical engineer |
|
PAT Testing |
Risk-based (annually typical) |
PUWER 1998 |
Competent person |
|
Fire Risk Assessment (electrical elements) |
Annually |
RRO Fire Safety Order 2005 |
Competent assessor |
|
RCD Testing |
Quarterly (push button test) |
BS 7671 |
Facilities manager / engineer |
|
Emergency Lighting Test |
Monthly + annual |
BS 5266 |
Qualified electrician |
Why Almens Consult Is the Right Partner
Almens Consult offers comprehensive electrical compliance services that take the complexity and risk out of meeting your legal obligations. From full EICR programmes and remediation through to ongoing maintenance planning and documentation management, their team ensures your business remains compliant, safe, and inspection-ready at all times. With Almens Consult, you never have to worry about what you might have missed.
Conclusion
Electrical safety compliance is a continuous obligation, not a one-time event. By following a structured, step-by-step compliance programme underpinned by professional engineering expertise UK businesses can manage their legal obligations effectively while creating a safer working environment for everyone on their premises.