NFPA 70 National Electrical Code 2026 first draft changes

Martin Hannigan hannigan at gmail.com
Wed Jan 31 20:49:07 UTC 2024


On Tue, Jan 30, 2024 at 8:05 AM Jay Hennigan <jay at west.net> wrote:

> On 1/29/24 16:11, Jay R. Ashworth wrote:
> >> It mostly just renumbers/reorganizes the NEC. Old time electricians will
> >> grumble because almost every code number changes.
> >
> > The NEC is included *by copy* in some state statutes, is it not?  If so,
> I
> > wonder how that will affect those.
>
> I believe so. The actual text has long been behind a paywall, but could
> be accessed on some state websites. NFPA has softened the paywall to
> view it but you still need to jump through some registration hoops.
>
> Typically the individual AHJ will specify a publication date of NEC as
> authoritative and it's often a few years behind the latest publication.
> Local authorities can and do make additions and changes from NEC. No
> Romex allowed in Chicago, for example.
>


AFAIK, it's free access albeit via the 'free' pay wall. Soft is a good
description.

For example once logged in:
https://www.nfpa.org/product/nfpa-11-standard/p0011code

You'll only see the "purchase option" on the page, but once you scroll down
you'll see "free access" on the right outer side. The text is watermarked,
but it's OK for non-craft users to do specific lookups. Works.

Looks like you can subscribe online and get the clean PDF's for printing
via their NFPA Link service for ~$100 per seat. HTH.

Warm regards,

-M<
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