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As of 1 January 2005 it is a legal (statutory) requirement for all work on fixed electrical installations in dwellings and associated buildings to comply with relevant standards. The relevant UK standard is BS 7671 2018 (Non statutory)

The EAWR (statutory) says that compliance with BS7671(Non statutory) will mean compliance with it.

The Building Regulations (statutory)

Approved Documents are intended to provide guidance for some of the more common building situations. However, there may well be alternative ways of achieving compliance with the requirements. Thus there is no obligation to adopt any particular solution contained in an Approved Document if you prefer to meet the relevant requirement in some other way.

So where does that leave us? Best is stick to the Regs and treat them as statutory (even though they're not) and you can't go wrong. They are the code we live by.
 
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[ElectriciansForums.net] Are the bloody Regs statutory or not?
 
BS 7671 is not statutory as a stand alone document.

However; Building Tegulation state BS 7671 in terms of what to follow and they are law so in effect not following BS 7671 will lead to non-compliance to Building Regulations and possible legal consequences.

Also if a customer states to install to BS 7671 and you agree to take on the work this then becomes a binding contract and you are legally obliged to deliver on it or you could be sued.

In conclusion, BS7671 is indirectly a legal document.
 
Building Tegulation state BS 7671 in terms of what to follow and they are law so in effect not following BS 7671 will lead to non-compliance to Building Regulations
This is incorrect. The approved documents refer to bs7671 as a possible way to comply but nowhere in the regulations themselves does it mention them.
Part p the actual part on the statute is very simple:
"Reasonable provision shall be made in the design and installation of electrical installations in order to protect persons operating, maintaining or altering the installations from fire or injury."

Also a contract with a company or customer adding for bs7671 is not in statute that's just a contract and comes under different law
 
This is incorrect. The approved documents refer to bs7671 as a possible way to comply but nowhere in the regulations themselves does it mention them.
Part p the actual part on the statute is very simple:
"Reasonable provision shall be made in the design and installation of electrical installations in order to protect persons operating, maintaining or altering the installations from fire or injury."

Also a contract with a company or customer adding for bs7671 is not in statute that's just a contract and comes under different law

I never mentioned Part P and your last paragraph is exactly what I said.
 

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