If you work with electrical equipment internationally, IEC standards govern how you test insulation. But the IEC catalog has dozens of standards that mention insulation testing — and figuring out which one applies to your equipment can be confusing.
This guide cuts through the noise. I’ll cover the IEC standards you actually need for insulation testing, with the specific clauses, test voltages, and minimum values from each one. I’ve worked with these standards for over 12 years across substation commissioning, motor testing, and protection system verification. Here’s what matters in practice.
Table of Contents
Overview: Which IEC Standard Applies to Your Equipment?
Here’s the fast answer:
| What You’re Testing | Primary IEC Standard |
|---|---|
| Industrial machinery (motors, drives, panels) | IEC 60204-1 |
| Building electrical installations | IEC 60364-6 |
| Power transformers | IEC 60076-3 |
| Switchgear and circuit breakers | IEC 62271 series |
| Rotating machines (motors, generators) | IEC 60034-1 (+ IEEE 43 for IR/PI) |
| High-voltage test procedures | IEC 60060 series |
| Medical equipment | IEC 60601-1 |
| Household appliances | IEC 60335-1 |
| Insulation material classification | IEC 60085 |
| Insulation coordination (HV systems) | IEC 60071 |
| Current transformers | IEC 61869 series |
Most industrial electricians deal primarily with IEC 60204-1 and IEC 60364-6. If you work with medium or high voltage, add IEC 60071 and IEC 62271 to your list.
IEC 60204-1 — Safety of Machinery: Electrical Equipment of Machines
Full title: IEC 60204-1 — Safety of machinery — Electrical equipment of machines — Part 1: General requirements
This is the standard most industrial maintenance teams reference for insulation testing.
What it requires
IEC 60204-1 mandates insulation resistance testing for all electrical equipment of machines before commissioning and as part of routine verification.
Specific requirements (Clause 18.3)
Test voltage: 500V DC for circuits with rated voltages up to 500V. For circuits rated above 500V, the test voltage increases — consult the specific edition for exact values.
Test duration: Minimum 1 minute with semiconductor devices disconnected or bypassed.
Minimum acceptable values:
| Circuit Type | Minimum IR |
|---|---|
| Power circuits and control circuits | ≥ 1 MΩ |
| Circuits incorporating heating elements or similar devices | ≥ 0.5 MΩ |
Important precaution: Before applying the test voltage, disconnect or bypass all semiconductor devices, surge suppressors, electronic control boards, capacitors, and any other components that could be damaged by the 500V DC test voltage or that could affect the reading.
What this means in practice
When I commission a new machine or control panel, the first electrical test after wiring verification is always the insulation resistance test per IEC 60204-1. I disconnect VFDs, PLCs, soft starters, and any electronic modules. Then I apply 500V DC between all live conductors tied together and the PE (protective earth) conductor.
If the reading is above 1 MΩ — the machine passes. Below 1 MΩ — something is wrong, and I investigate before energizing.
IEC 60364-6 — Low-Voltage Electrical Installations: Verification
Full title: IEC 60364-6 — Low-voltage electrical installations — Part 6: Verification
This standard governs insulation testing for building electrical installations — commercial, residential, and industrial wiring.
Specific requirements (Clause 6.4.3.3)
IEC 60364-6 specifies insulation resistance testing between live conductors and between live conductors and earth, with the following test voltages and minimum values:
| Circuit Nominal Voltage | Test Voltage (DC) | Minimum IR |
|---|---|---|
| SELV and PELV (up to 50V) | 250V | ≥ 0.5 MΩ |
| Up to 500V (including 230V, 400V) | 500V | ≥ 1.0 MΩ |
| Above 500V (up to 1,000V) | 1,000V | ≥ 1.0 MΩ |
Test procedure per the standard
The test is performed with all loads disconnected, all switches in the closed (on) position, and all lamps removed. This ensures you’re testing the wiring insulation, not the equipment connected to it.
Measurement is taken between:
- Each live conductor and earth
- Between live conductors (line-to-line, line-to-neutral)
Practical note
IEC 60364-6 also warns to disconnect or protect equipment that could be damaged by the test voltage or that could influence the test result. This includes electronic switches, dimmers, RCDs (residual current devices) with electronic components, and similar devices.
IEC 60085 — Electrical Insulation: Thermal Evaluation and Designation
Full title: IEC 60085 — Electrical insulation — Thermal evaluation and designation
This standard defines the thermal classes that other standards reference.
Thermal classification
| Thermal Class | Maximum Temperature | Common Name |
|---|---|---|
| Class Y | 90°C | — |
| Class A | 105°C | — |
| Class E | 120°C | — |
| Class B | 130°C | — |
| Class F | 155°C | — |
| Class H | 180°C | — |
| Class N | 200°C | — |
| Class R | 220°C | — |
| Class 250 | 250°C | — |
Why this matters for insulation testing
IEEE 43-2013 uses these thermal classes to define minimum PI values. Class A insulation has a minimum PI of 1.5, while Class B, F, and H all require a minimum PI of 2.0.
Most modern industrial motors use Class F (155°C) insulation with Class B (130°C) temperature rise. This means the insulation can handle 155°C, but the motor is designed to operate at 130°C maximum, providing a safety margin.
When you see “Insulation Class F” on a motor nameplate, this tells you the minimum PI must be 2.0 per IEEE 43-2013, Table 3.
IEC 60071 — Insulation Coordination
Full title: IEC 60071-1 — Insulation co-ordination — Part 1: Definitions, principles and rules
This standard deals with selecting insulation levels for high-voltage equipment to withstand voltage stresses including lightning and switching surges.
What it covers
IEC 60071 defines:
- Standard insulation levels (BIL — Basic Insulation Level)
- Voltage withstand requirements for different system voltages
- Coordination between equipment insulation levels and protective devices (surge arresters)
Key concept: BIL (Basic Insulation Level)
The BIL is the voltage the insulation must withstand during a standard lightning impulse test (1.2/50 μs waveform). For example:
| System Voltage | Standard BIL |
|---|---|
| 12 kV | 75 kV or 95 kV |
| 24 kV | 125 kV or 150 kV |
| 36 kV | 170 kV or 200 kV |
| 72.5 kV | 325 kV |
| 145 kV | 550 kV or 650 kV |
Practical relevance
IEC 60071 doesn’t directly specify megger test procedures. But it determines the insulation design level of your equipment, which in turn determines the appropriate test voltage for routine insulation resistance testing.
If you’re testing a 36 kV switchgear with a BIL of 170 kV, a megger test at 5000V DC is appropriate. A 500V test would be insufficient to stress the insulation meaningfully.
IEC 60076-3 — Power Transformers: Insulation Levels, Dielectric Tests
Full title: IEC 60076-3 — Power transformers — Part 3: Insulation levels, dielectric tests and external clearances in air
What it covers
This standard specifies the insulation levels for power transformers and the dielectric tests required to verify them, including:
- Lightning impulse withstand test
- Switching impulse withstand test (for Um ≥ 300 kV)
- Applied voltage test
- Induced voltage test with partial discharge measurement
Insulation resistance testing for transformers
While IEC 60076-3 focuses on type and routine dielectric tests at the factory, field insulation resistance testing of transformers is governed by IEEE C57.152-2013 (Diagnostic Field Testing of Fluid-Filled Power Transformers).
IEEE C57.152-2013, Clause 7.2.13.4 provides PI interpretation for transformers:
| PI Value | Transformer Insulation Condition |
|---|---|
| Below 1.0 | Dangerous |
| 1.0 – 1.1 | Poor |
| 1.1 – 1.25 | Questionable |
| 1.25 – 2.0 | Fair |
| Above 2.0 | Good |
Note: Transformer PI values are typically lower than motor PI values because transformer oil has a polarization index close to 1.0. A PI of 1.5 on a transformer is acceptable, whereas the same value on a Class F motor would be below minimum.
IEC 62271 — High-Voltage Switchgear and Controlgear
Full title: IEC 62271 series — High-voltage switchgear and controlgear
Key parts for insulation testing
- IEC 62271-1 — Common specifications (defines insulation levels and test procedures)
- IEC 62271-100 — AC circuit breakers
- IEC 62271-102 — Disconnectors and earthing switches
- IEC 62271-200 — Metal-enclosed switchgear (up to 52 kV)
- IEC 62271-203 — Gas-insulated metal-enclosed switchgear (GIS)
Insulation testing requirements
The IEC 62271 series defines type tests (power-frequency withstand, lightning impulse) and routine tests for switchgear. Field insulation resistance testing of switchgear follows general practice:
- Test voltage: 1,000V–5,000V DC depending on the switchgear rated voltage
- Minimum IR: Typically specified by the manufacturer, but generally >1,000 MΩ for new GIS equipment and >100 MΩ for air-insulated switchgear
Switchgear is low-capacitance equipment, so spot readings stabilize quickly — usually within 15–30 seconds. A full PI test is not normally necessary for switchgear.
IEC 60034-1 — Rotating Electrical Machines
Full title: IEC 60034-1 — Rotating electrical machines — Part 1: Rating and performance
What it covers for insulation
IEC 60034-1 defines the rated insulation voltages and temperature limits for motors and generators. It references IEC 60085 for thermal classification and specifies dielectric test requirements:
Routine dielectric test: For machines with rated voltage ≤ 1 kV, the test voltage is (2 × Un + 1000V) AC for 1 minute.
For insulation resistance testing (IR and PI), the industry standard reference is IEEE 43-2013, which provides the detailed procedures, test voltages, and minimum values that IEC 60034-1 does not cover in the same depth.
IEC 60060 — High-Voltage Test Techniques
Full title: IEC 60060-1 — High-voltage test techniques — Part 1: General definitions and test requirements
What it covers
IEC 60060 defines the standard test procedures for high-voltage testing, including:
- Power-frequency withstand voltage tests
- Lightning impulse voltage tests (1.2/50 μs)
- Switching impulse voltage tests (250/2500 μs)
- DC voltage tests
This standard is referenced by IEC 60071, IEC 60076, IEC 62271, and other equipment standards as the method for performing the dielectric tests they specify.
Relevance to insulation resistance testing
IEC 60060 defines the DC test voltage waveform and procedures that form the basis for high-voltage insulation resistance testing. When you use a megohmmeter at 5,000V or 10,000V DC, the instrument’s output should comply with IEC 60060 for a valid test.
IEC 60601-1 — Medical Electrical Equipment
Full title: IEC 60601-1 — Medical electrical equipment — Part 1: General requirements for basic safety and essential performance
Insulation requirements
Medical equipment has the strictest insulation requirements because patient safety is at stake. IEC 60601-1 requires:
- Insulation resistance: Measured at 500V DC, minimum ≥ 50 MΩ for basic insulation (significantly higher than the 1 MΩ required by IEC 60204-1)
- Dielectric withstand: 4,000V AC for basic insulation, with higher values for reinforced insulation
- Leakage current limits: Extremely tight — patient leakage current must not exceed 10 μA under normal conditions
IEC 60335-1 — Household Appliances
Full title: IEC 60335-1 — Household and similar electrical appliances — Safety — Part 1: General requirements
Insulation resistance test (Clause 16)
- Test voltage: 500V DC for appliances rated up to 130V; 1,000V DC for appliances rated above 130V
- Minimum IR: ≥ 2 MΩ for functional insulation; ≥ 7 MΩ for reinforced insulation
These values are per the routine production test. Type tests have additional requirements including dielectric withstand tests.
How These Standards Connect to IEEE 43
IEC standards define the insulation design requirements and basic verification tests. IEEE 43-2013 provides the detailed diagnostic methodology for rotating machinery.
In practice, here’s how they work together:
| Stage | Standard Used |
|---|---|
| Equipment design and insulation levels | IEC 60071, IEC 60034-1, IEC 60076-3 |
| Factory dielectric tests | IEC 60060, IEC 62271, IEC 60034-1 |
| Installation verification | IEC 60204-1, IEC 60364-6 |
| Routine maintenance IR/PI testing | IEEE 43-2013 |
| Transformer field diagnostics | IEEE C57.152-2013 |
| Acceptance testing (North America) | NETA ATS / NETA MTS |
If you work internationally, you’ll reference IEC standards for design and installation and IEEE 43 for maintenance diagnostics. They complement each other rather than compete.
Insulation Testing on Current Transformers (From Field Practice)
Current transformers (CTs) in high-voltage substations require specific insulation tests before commissioning. Based on my field experience commissioning CTs on 220 kV and 66 kV systems, here are the test voltages I use:
| Test Connection | Test Voltage (DC) | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Primary winding to ground | 5,000V | 60 seconds |
| Primary winding to secondary winding | 2,500V | 60 seconds |
| Between secondary cores (multi-core CTs) | 1,000V | 60 seconds |
| Secondary winding to ground | 1,000V | 60 seconds |
Minimum acceptable value: >100 MΩ for high-voltage CTs (generally much higher — I typically see readings in the GΩ range on new equipment).
For HV current transformers (220 kV, 500 kV), I also perform a Tan Delta (dissipation factor) test to evaluate the dielectric properties of the insulation. Acceptable tan delta values should be below 0.5% (5 × 10⁻³). Any elevation above this signals partial discharge risk or contamination.
Additional CT commissioning tests include winding resistance, polarity verification, turns ratio, and excitation curve / knee point voltage measurement. These aren’t insulation tests per se, but they complete the diagnostic picture and should always be done alongside insulation testing.
Quick Reference Table: All IEC Insulation Standards at a Glance
| Standard | Applies To | Test Voltage | Min. IR | Key Clause |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IEC 60204-1 | Machinery electrical equipment | 500V DC | ≥ 1 MΩ (0.5 MΩ for heater circuits) | Clause 18.3 |
| IEC 60364-6 | LV installations (up to 1 kV) | 250V / 500V / 1,000V DC | ≥ 0.5 – 1.0 MΩ | Clause 6.4.3.3 |
| IEC 60085 | Insulation thermal classification | N/A (classification only) | N/A | Defines Class A–H |
| IEC 60071-1 | Insulation coordination (HV) | Per BIL tables | Per design level | Clause 4–6 |
| IEC 60076-3 | Transformer insulation levels | Per voltage class | Per manufacturer spec | Multiple clauses |
| IEC 62271 series | HV switchgear | 1,000V–5,000V DC (field) | >100–1,000 MΩ (typical) | Varies by part |
| IEC 60034-1 | Rotating machines | (2×Un + 1000V) AC dielectric | Per IEEE 43 for IR/PI | Clause 9 |
| IEC 60060-1 | HV test techniques | Defines test waveforms | N/A | Full standard |
| IEC 60601-1 | Medical equipment | 500V DC | ≥ 50 MΩ | Clause 8.8 |
| IEC 60335-1 | Household appliances | 500V / 1,000V DC | ≥ 2 MΩ (≥ 7 MΩ reinforced) | Clause 16 |
| IEEE 43-2013 | Rotating machinery (IR/PI) | 500V – 10,000V DC | 5–100 MΩ (by type) | Clauses 8, 12 |
| IEEE C57.152-2013 | Transformer field testing | Per transformer voltage | PI > 1.25 (fair) | Clause 7.2.13.4 |
FAQ
Which IEC standard do I follow for testing a 400V industrial motor?
For installation verification, follow IEC 60204-1 (500V DC, minimum 1 MΩ). For routine maintenance and diagnostic testing (IR, PI, DAR), follow IEEE 43-2013 (500V or 1000V DC, minimum 5 MΩ for random-wound motors, PI minimum 2.0 for Class F insulation).
Is IEC 60204-1 the same as EN 60204-1?
Yes. EN 60204-1 is the European adoption of IEC 60204-1. The technical content is identical. The EN prefix simply means it’s been adopted as a European Norm.
Do I need to buy these standards?
The full standards are copyrighted and available for purchase from IEC (webstore.iec.ch) or national standards bodies. For insulation testing, I’d recommend having at least IEC 60204-1 and IEEE 43-2013 in your library. Many companies have site licenses or subscriptions through services like IHS Markit or Techstreet.
Why do IEC and IEEE have different minimum IR values?
IEC standards (like 60204-1) set a minimum pass/fail threshold for installation verification — 1 MΩ is the absolute floor. IEEE 43-2013 provides higher minimums for rotating machinery maintenance because it’s a diagnostic standard, not just a verification standard. A motor with 1 MΩ passes IEC 60204-1 but would fail IEEE 43’s minimum of 5 MΩ for random-wound coils. The higher IEEE value gives you earlier warning of degradation.
Can I use one megger for all these standards?
A megger with selectable test voltages of 250V, 500V, 1000V, 2500V, and 5000V DC covers the requirements of IEC 60204-1, IEC 60364-6, IEEE 43, and field testing of most equipment. For HV type tests per IEC 60060, specialized equipment is needed.
Key Takeaways
- IEC 60204-1 is your primary standard for industrial machinery: 500V DC, minimum 1 MΩ, Clause 18.3.
- IEC 60364-6 covers building installations: test voltage matched to circuit rating, minimum 0.5–1.0 MΩ.
- IEC 60085 defines thermal classes (A through H) that determine PI minimums in IEEE 43.
- IEC 60071 sets insulation design levels for HV systems — determines appropriate field test voltages.
- IEEE 43-2013 remains the primary diagnostic standard for IR and PI testing of rotating machines worldwide, even in IEC-based countries.
- For current transformers, test at voltages specific to each winding combination (5000V primary-to-ground, 2500V primary-to-secondary, 1000V secondary-to-ground).
- IEC and IEEE standards complement each other. IEC handles design and verification. IEEE 43 handles diagnostics and maintenance.
Standards Referenced in This Article
| Standard | Edition | Title |
|---|---|---|
| IEC 60204-1 | Ed. 6.0 (2016) | Safety of machinery — Electrical equipment of machines |
| IEC 60364-6 | Ed. 3.0 (2016) | Low-voltage electrical installations — Part 6: Verification |
| IEC 60085 | Ed. 4.0 (2007) | Electrical insulation — Thermal evaluation and designation |
| IEC 60071-1 | Ed. 9.0 (2019) | Insulation co-ordination — Part 1: Definitions, principles and rules |
| IEC 60076-3 | Ed. 3.0 (2013) | Power transformers — Part 3: Insulation levels, dielectric tests |
| IEC 62271-1 | Ed. 2.0 (2017) | High-voltage switchgear and controlgear — Common specifications |
| IEC 60034-1 | Ed. 13.0 (2017) | Rotating electrical machines — Rating and performance |
| IEC 60060-1 | Ed. 3.0 (2010) | High-voltage test techniques — General definitions and test requirements |
| IEC 60601-1 | Ed. 3.2 (2020) | Medical electrical equipment — Basic safety and essential performance |
| IEC 60335-1 | Ed. 6.2 (2023) | Household appliances — Safety — General requirements |
| IEEE 43-2013 | 2013 | Recommended Practice for Testing Insulation Resistance of Electric Machinery |
| IEEE C57.152-2013 | 2013 | Diagnostic Field Testing of Fluid-Filled Power Transformers |