Summary

Bathroom lighting is one of the most common areas of non-compliance in domestic electrical work. Tradespeople and homeowners frequently fit standard (non-rated) downlights in bathrooms, not realising that the zone requirements apply to the entire ceiling — even areas not directly above the bath or shower. A downlight 500mm from the bath is still in Zone 2 and requires a minimum IPX4 fitting.

Understanding the zone boundaries, IP rating requirements, and what that means in practice allows you to specify and supply the correct fittings, avoid callbacks, and ensure the installation is compliant with BS 7671 and Building Regulations Part P. This article covers domestic bathroom zones for England, Scotland, and Wales under BS 7671:2018+A2:2022.

Key Facts

  • Zone 0 — the interior of the bath tub or shower tray; IPX7 (submersion) or IPX8 required; virtually no fittings are installed in Zone 0 in practice
  • Zone 1 — directly above the bath or shower, from the floor level to 2.25m height (or the ceiling, whichever is lower); IPX4 minimum (IPX5 if subject to water jets)
  • Zone 2 — extends horizontally 0.6m beyond the Zone 1 boundary; from floor to 2.25m; IPX4 minimum
  • Outside all zones — rest of the bathroom above 2.25m or more than 0.6m from the bath/shower; no specific IP requirement but IPX1 (IP20) is absolute minimum; standard downlights (IP20/IP44) are typically used
  • Shower enclosures — if the shower is fully enclosed (has a door and walls), the zones apply only within the enclosure; however, this requires the enclosure to be rated to prevent water leaving; in practice most installers treat the zone as extending to the enclosure walls plus 0.6m beyond the door as a precaution
  • Ceiling above bath — if the ceiling is within 2.25m of the floor (as it almost always is), the ceiling directly above the bath is in Zone 1 and requires IPX4 minimum
  • GU10 downlights — standard GU10 downlights are IP20 (not protected); you must use IP44-rated GU10 downlights (sealed units) anywhere in Zone 1 or Zone 2
  • Bathroom IP44 — the practical minimum for ceiling downlights throughout the entire bathroom (safer specification)
  • IP65 — fully dust tight and water jet protected; typically specified in shower enclosures or for any fitting that may be directly wetted
  • LED compatibility — many IP44 downlights are LED; ensure the driver/transformer is also rated for the environment if in a damp area
  • Shaving sockets — must be specifically designed for bathroom use (shaver socket unit with 20mA RCD protection and safety isolating transformer); standard sockets are not permitted in zones 0, 1, or 2
  • Part P — all bathroom electrical work is notifiable; registered electrician or Building Control notification required

Quick Reference Table

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Zone Location Height Min. IP Rating Typical Fittings
Zone 0 Inside bath/shower tray Floor to water level IPX7/IPX8 Underwater light (specialist)
Zone 1 Above bath/shower tray Floor to 2.25m IPX4 (IPX5 if jets) IP44 or IP65 downlights
Zone 2 0.6m beyond Zone 1 Floor to 2.25m IPX4 IP44 downlights
Outside zones Rest of bathroom Above 2.25m IP20 minimum IP44 for safety; standard fittings
Shower enclosure (within) Inside sealed enclosure Floor to ceiling IPX4 minimum IP44 or IP65

Detailed Guidance

Zone Boundaries Explained

The zone boundaries are measured from the bath or shower tray perimeter. A practical way to visualise them on site:

Zone 1 above a bath:

  • Draw an imaginary vertical plane from each edge of the bath to 2.25m height
  • Everything within that vertical column (directly above the bath surface) is Zone 1
  • The ceiling above the bath is in Zone 1 if it is below 2.25m (which it almost always is in domestic bathrooms)

Zone 2:

  • Draw a further vertical plane 0.6m beyond the Zone 1 boundary
  • The area between Zone 1 and this new boundary (also to 2.25m) is Zone 2
  • This typically encompasses a large part of the bathroom ceiling area, depending on the room size

Practical result for a small bathroom (2m × 2m): with a bath along one wall, Zones 1 and 2 together extend across most of the ceiling. Only fittings more than 0.6m from the bath edge on all sides are outside Zone 2. In many small bathrooms, virtually the entire ceiling is in Zone 1 or Zone 2.

Walk-in shower (no tray): the zone extends from the outer edge of the shower area. For a walk-in wet room shower, the zone boundary is the edge of the designed shower area — and Zone 2 extends 0.6m beyond that.

IP Rating Explained

The IP code (BS EN 60529) is a two-digit code: the first digit (0-6) rates protection against solid ingress; the second digit (0-8) rates water ingress:

Second Digit Protection Level Description
0 None No protection
1 IPX1 Vertical dripping water
2 IPX2 Dripping water tilted 15°
3 IPX3 Spraying water up to 60°
4 IPX4 Splashing water from any direction
5 IPX5 Water jets from any direction
6 IPX6 Powerful water jets
7 IPX7 Temporary submersion (up to 1m)
8 IPX8 Continuous submersion

Key distinctions:

  • Zone 1 requires IPX4 (splash protection) — IP44 downlights meet this requirement
  • If shower heads or body jets could direct a water jet at the fitting, IPX5 is needed — IP65 fittings meet this
  • Zone 0 needs IPX7 — only specialist underwater fittings are rated for this

In practice: use IP44 throughout the entire bathroom ceiling as a standard specification. This eliminates zone confusion, provides adequate protection everywhere, and gives a consistent spec that is easy to apply. The marginal additional cost of IP44 vs IP20 downlights is negligible.

Typical Bathroom Lighting Layout

Main ambient light (ceiling):

  • IP44 or IP65 downlights; 3-4 for a standard bathroom
  • Warm white (2700-3000K) creates a more relaxing atmosphere
  • Ensure the transformer/driver for LED GU10s is rated for the location if in a damp area

Mirror / vanity lighting:

  • Dedicated mirror light or IP44 bathroom mirror with integrated light
  • Positioned horizontally at either side or above the mirror; avoid back-lighting that creates shadows
  • Shaver socket: a specific bathroom shaver unit (BESA rated) provides a safe way to include a socket for electric shavers; must include an isolating transformer

Shower lighting:

  • Recessed IP65 or IP67 downlight inside the shower enclosure
  • Direct the beam downward; avoid lamp positions that create glare when showering

Zone control:

  • A single switch outside the bathroom or a pull-cord switch inside is the standard
  • Dimmer circuits in bathrooms: use only dimmers rated for LED loads and specified for bathroom use; standard dimmers are not Zone 1 or Zone 2 appropriate without specific IP rating
  • Separate circuits for main lighting and mirror lighting allow independent control

Mirrors with Integrated Lighting

Illuminated bathroom mirrors (LED halo, backlit, front-lit) are popular and compliant when:

  • The mirror and its integrated light have a minimum IP44 rating for Zone 2 installation
  • The mirror is fixed to a wall in Zone 2 or outside all zones (mirrors directly above or adjacent to a bath or shower must be Zone 2 rated)
  • Power supply is from a dedicated fused spur (or direct wired) via a registered electrician

Do not connect a bathroom mirror to a socket — plug-in mirror connections are only acceptable outside Zone 2 in bedrooms or dressing rooms, not in bathrooms.

Part P — Bathroom Electrical Work

All electrical work in a bathroom is notifiable under Building Regulations Part P (England). This includes:

  • Installing any new circuit
  • Replacing any fitting (switch, socket, light fitting) if it involves circuit alteration
  • Adding a new lighting point

A like-for-like replacement of a light fitting with no circuit alteration is a minor works item and may be self-certified by the person doing the work, provided they understand their obligations. However, any addition to the circuit (new downlight, new circuit for mirror) requires a registered electrician or Building Control notification.

A registered electrician (NICEIC, NAPIT, ELECSA) will issue a Minor Electrical Installation Works Certificate on completion, which provides documentation of compliance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do all downlights in the bathroom need to be IP rated?

Yes — the recommended practice is to fit IP44 throughout the entire bathroom ceiling, even in areas technically outside Zone 2. This is because zone boundaries shift if the bath or shower position changes in the future, and IP44 fittings provide a blanket specification that covers all possibilities. The cost difference is minimal.

Can I use a standard pendant light in a bathroom?

Not within Zone 1 or Zone 2. A standard pendant light (IP20) can only be installed outside all zones — i.e., more than 0.6m from the bath/shower and above 2.25m from the floor. In most domestic bathrooms, this rules out pendants entirely as the ceiling is below 2.25m. Recessed IP44 downlights are the practical specification for bathroom ceilings.

Does a bathroom need a separate circuit?

Not mandated by BS 7671 for a standard domestic bathroom, but it is good practice. Sharing a lighting circuit with a bedroom or landing means a bathroom lighting fault trips the light for other rooms too. A dedicated bathroom lighting circuit, protected by a 10A RCBO, is the recommended specification for new work.

Can I put a normal socket in a bathroom?

Standard 13A sockets are not permitted within Zone 1, Zone 2, or even outside those zones within a bathroom that has a bath or shower. The only socket type permitted inside a bathroom is a specifically designed shaver socket (BESA type, with safety isolating transformer and 20mA RCD). Outside bathrooms (adjacent dressing room, bedroom) standard sockets are fine.

What IP rating is required for a bathroom downlight above a shower?

IPX4 minimum (the ceiling directly above the shower is in Zone 1). If the shower includes body jets or the head is positioned in a way that water could be directed upward at the ceiling fitting, specify IPX5 (IP65). For safety and simplicity, always specify IP65 for any fitting inside a shower enclosure.

Regulations & Standards

  • BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 (IET Wiring Regulations, 18th Edition) — Section 701: locations containing a bath or shower; zone definitions, IP ratings, and permissible electrical equipment

  • BS EN 60529 — specification for degrees of protection provided by enclosures (IP Code)

  • Building Regulations Approved Document P — electrical safety in dwellings; notifiable work in bathrooms

  • BS EN 60598 — luminaires standard; relevant to IP-rated bathroom light fittings

  • IET Wiring Regulations 18th Edition — Section 701 — the definitive source for bathroom zone requirements

  • NICEIC — Bathroom Zone Guidance — practical guidance for electricians

  • Electrical Safety First — Bathroom Safety — accessible summary of zone requirements

  • bathroom zones — full electrical zone guide including shaver sockets and supplementary bonding

  • bathroom ventilation — extract fan IP ratings and zone requirements

  • wetroom construction — electrical considerations in wet room construction

  • part p notifications — Part P notification process for bathroom electrical work