The document outlines the common electrical codes and standards homeowners should follow when wiring a garage, including burying cables, installing a disconnect switch, using tamper-resistant outlets, and grounding requirements.
A disconnect must be installed inside the garage to shut off all power. Cables must be buried at least 18 inches underground and conduits at 24 inches. A grounding electrode is required if supplying the garage with multiple circuits.
Romex or NM-B cable can be used inside the garage if run through studs and protected from physical damage. Direct-burial cables like UF or USE can be buried and run inside PVC conduit.
This handout answers questions most often asked by
homeowners. This information is a guide to the most
common questions. It is not intended, nor shall it be considered, a complete set of requirements. The wiring must be done to the standards of the latest state-adopted National Electrical Code (NEC). Libraries and electrical supply dealers may have other books available to further assist you. An Electrical Permit is required for all electrical work, including wiring a garage. In a single-family residence, experienced owners/homesteaders may obtain the permit to do the work themselves. For other residential occupancies, such as rental properties, an electrical contractor must be hired to do the work and obtain the permit. Rules to operate by: 1. Most homeowners choose to run the el ectri cal underground. The t wo most popular methods are direct-burial cable or PVC (plastic) conduit. Direct buri al cabl e i s desi gnated as UF (Underground Feeder) or for larger sizes, USE (Underground Service Entrance). Direct-burial cables may be buried in the ground at 24 inches below grade. They must have mechanical protection, such as PVC conduit, wherever they are closer than 24 inches below grade. The most common point where this occurs is when the run is brought up above grade to enter the house and garage. PVC conduit must be approved as electrical conduit. Other types, such as PVC plumbing pipe, are not acceptable. Standard insulated conductors may be pulled inside the PVC. These single conductors must have a W (water-resi stant) i n the desi gnati on stamped on the jacket of the wire. Examples of such desi gnati ons i ncl ude: THWN, XHHW, etc. Type Romex or Non-Metallic Cable (NM-B) cannot be run inside underground conduit, because the outer jacket of the NM-B is not rated for wet locations. PVC conduit must be buried at 18 inches below grade. (This is measured to the top of the conduit, so the trench will have to be deeper than 18 inches.) 2. A disconnect must be installed in the garage to shut off all power to the building. This disconnect must be immediately inside the garage at the entrance point of the feed from the house. If you are using a multi-circuit panelboard in the garage and have no more than six breakers in the panel, these breakers may be used as the disconnecting means. When using more than si x breakers, a mai n breaker i s requi red i n the panelboard. If you are running a single 15- or 20- ampere circuit from the house to feed a minimum number of lights and outlets, you may use a separate single-pole switch (such as a standard light switch) as a disconnect. This switch must be the first device that is on the circuit once it enters the garage; it may be used only as a disconnect and cannot be used to control lights or other equipment. This disconnect must be labeled as the disconnect switch on its box cover. See Detached Garage Supplied by a Three Wire Branch Circuit. 3. Romex or NM-B may be used inside the garage. It must be drilled and inserted through the studs, not run on the face of them. Also, never drill through factory roof trusses, run the Romex or NM-B on the top edge in a location where it will not be damaged. Romex or NM-B cable is to be routed so it is not subject to physical damage. 4. Al l 125-vol t, si ngl e-phase, 15- and 20-ampere receptacles installed in garages must be a Tamper- Resistant (TR) type and protected by a Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI), including any receptacles for garage door openers or specific appliances. There are two forms of GFCI-protected devices. You may use a tamper-resistant receptacle-type, GFCI-protected device or a breaker-style GFCI protective device. Both devices are installed at the beginning of the circuit to be protected and several standard tamper-resistant outlets may be protected downstream by one GFCI outlet. See the manufacturers instructions for details. On a GFCI, the line is the power in and the load is the power out to other receptacles. TR receptacles are designed with a shutter over the slots so only a standard cord cap (plug) can be inserted. Add-on plug covers are not acceptable. Any receptacles on the exterior of the garage must be tamper-resistant (TR), GFCI-protected and Weather Resistant (WR). (There will be a WR visible on the face of the receptacle.) Residential Detached Garage Wiring Information Sheet Community Development Building and Inspection 1800 W. Old Shakopee Road Bloomington MN 55431-3027 PH 952-563-8930 FAX 952-563-8949 TTY 952-563-8740 www.ci.bloomington.mn.us web 53fff_detach_garage_wire pg 1 of 4 (08/09) This information is a guide to the most common questions. It is not intended, nor shall it be considered, a complete set of requirements. 5. If a single circuit with a grounding conductor (either green or bare and attached to the grounding system in the house) is run from the house to the garage, no ground rod is required at the garage, see Detached Garage Supplied by a Three Wire Branch Circuit. For feeders from the house to the garage, an eight-foot ground rod must be driven at the garage. A grounding conductor is required with the branch circuit or feeder. When a feeder or more than one circuit is supplying the garage, a grounding electrode is required at the garage. If there is no existing grounding electrode, (metal underground water pi pe) a ground rod i s required and is connected to the equipment grounds in the garage, see Detached Garage Supplied by a Four Wire Feeder. This ground rod may be driven right outside the garage with a #6 copper ground wire attached to it. If the wire is subject to physical damage on the outside or inside of the garage, it must be protected by conduit. The easiest method of protection is typically 1/2-inch PVC. The #6 wire must be attached to the grounding system for the electrical in the garage. 6. The minimum wiring required in a detached garage that has el ectri ci t y woul d i ncl ude a means to disconnect the power to the garage, switches at the service door to control a light inside the structure, and a light outside the garage service door. Vehicular (overhead) doors of a garage are exempt from any l i ghti ng requi rements. A mi ni mum of one GFCI- protected readily-accessible receptacle somewhere inside the garage is also required. web 53fff_detach_garage_wire pg 2 of 4 (08/09) Garage Disconnect MAIN DETACHED GARAGE SUPPLIED BY A THREE-WIRE BRANCH CIRCUIT TO GARAGE LIGHTS AND RECEPTACLES Romex, NM-B cable. DISCONNECT SWITCH located close to where cable or conduit comes into garage, must be marked Garage Disconnect. NEW SINGLE POLE BREAKER added for garage. EXISTING GROUNDING ELECTRODES (Water pipe and ground rod.) NEUTRAL/GROUND BUS White, green and bare wires. Bonded to service enclosure. UF CABLE, IMC OR ELECTRICAL PVC CONDUIT to garage. Detached garage supplied from a service panel in the house by way of a three-wire branch circuit: one hot (black), neutral/grounded (white) and equipment ground (bare copper or green) conductor. This is an economical way to wire a garage with UF cable buried a minimum of 24 inches deep or electrical PVC conduit buried 18 inches deep. web 52csubdiv pg 3 of 4 (02/09) MAIN DETACHED GARAGE SUPPLIED BY A FOUR-WIRE FEEDER MINIMUM #6 CONDUCTOR to electrode (metal underground piping). When no underground piping is present, install a minimum of 8-foot long ground rod. SUB-PANEL IN GARAGE with equipment grounding bus bonded to sub-panel enclosure. ISOLATED NEUTRAL BUS for the neutral conductors (white wires.) MAIN BREAKER required in garage when more than six breakers are in the panel. NEW TWO POLE BREAKERS added for garage sub-panel. EXISTING GROUNDING ELECTRODES (Water pipe and concrete-encased electrode or ground rod.) NEUTRAL/GROUND BUS White, green and bare wires. Bonded to service enclosure. FOUR-WIRE UNDERGROUND OR OVERHEAD FEEDER. Sub-panel in detached garage supplied from a service panel in a house by way of a four-wire feeder: two hots (black), neutral (white) and a ground (bare copper or green). web 52csubdiv pg 4 of 4 (02/09) Garage Disconnect DISCONNECT SWITCH located outside or inside nearest point of entrance to the conductors, must be marked Garage Disconnect. WIRE NUTS required on all splices. DETACHED GARAGE WIRING DO NOT drill holes in ceiling trusses. RUNNING BOARDS required when NM (Romex) is run perpendicular to the rafters. All receptacles must be TAMPER-RESISTANT and GFCI-PROTECTED. Drill holes in studs and ceiling plates. RUNNING BOARDS required when NM (Romex) is run perpendicular to wall studs and is readily accessible. MINIMUM 6 INCHES wire in boxes. STRAPS ON NM (Romex) within 8 inches of boxes and every 4-1/2 feet thereafter.