UK consumer unit guidance

Consumer units and fuse boards, explained without the sales pitch

What a consumer unit replacement really costs, how a modern board differs from an old fuse box, the signs yours needs upgrading, why it is notifiable Part P work needing a registered electrician and an Electrical Installation Certificate, and how long it takes. Every figure is a range, with its source.

£350–£1,200 typical replacement4–8 hours usual on the dayPart P notifiable; needs an EIC
Cited sourcesPart P, BS 7671, trade guidesRanges, not promisescosts depend on your propertyVetted electricianschecked & introduced

In 40 seconds

Replacing a consumer unit (the modern name for a fuse board or fuse box) in the UK usually costs roughly £350–£1,200, commonly around £500–£800 for a board using RCDs and about £800–£1,200 for a full RCBO board, including the unit, labour, testing and certification. The work is notifiable under Part P of the Building Regulations in England and Wales, so it must be done by a registered electrician who self-certifies (or pre-notified to building control), and it comes with an Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC) and a Building Regulations compliance certificate. A straightforward job usually takes around 4–8 hours, with the power off for most of that. The honest answer is always a range, because it depends on your number of circuits, board type and the condition of your existing wiring.

Most consumer unit guidance is published by the firms fitting the boards, so the numbers tend to be optimistic and the rules glossed over. The pages below give honest cost ranges, explain how a modern consumer unit differs from an old fuse box, set out the signs yours needs replacing, and cover the Part P rules and timescales — before you take a single quote.

£500–£800
RCD board, typical
£800–£1,200
full RCBO board
4–8 hours
usual on the day
Part P
notifiable work

Cost & pricing

What a consumer unit replacement actually costs in the UK.

Cost

How much does a consumer unit replacement cost in the UK?

Typical ranges for an RCD board versus a full RCBO board, what's included, and how circuit count, surge protection and existing-wiring faults move the number.

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Definition & terminology

Fuse board, fuse box or consumer unit — what's the difference.

Fuse board vs unit

Fuse board vs consumer unit — what's the difference?

Why they're the same thing under different names, how a modern consumer unit differs from an old fuse box, and what RCDs, RCBOs and MCBs actually do.

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When to replace

The signs your consumer unit needs upgrading.

When you need one

When do I need a new consumer unit?

Rewireable fuses, no RCD, scorching or buzzing, repeated tripping, an EICR fail or a new EV charger — the signs that mean it's time, and the ones that don't.

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Regulations & who can do it

Part P, who's allowed to do the work, and the certificates you should get.

Do I need an electrician

Do I need an electrician to change a consumer unit?

Why a consumer unit replacement is notifiable Part P work, what a registered electrician self-certifies, and the EIC and Building Regs certificate you should receive.

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Process & timescales

How long the job takes and what happens on the day.

How long it takes

How long does a consumer unit replacement take?

The usual 4–8 hours with the power off, what happens through the day, and why a fault found on testing can push the job into a second visit.

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How it works

Guidance first. Quotes only if you want them.

We publish honest, sourced answers on consumer unit costs, terminology, the signs you need an upgrade, and the Part P rules and timescales, then — if you'd like prices — match you with a vetted, registered electrician who inspects your installation and quotes on a clear specification. Costs are always shown as ranges that depend on your property. No obligation, and you decide whether to proceed.

Ready for a consumer unit quote on your home?

Tell us about your property and we'll match you with a vetted, registered electrician who inspects your board, explains your options, and quotes on a clear, comparable specification.

Free to be matched. You agree any price with the electrician directly.