Russell_Reid
Well-known member
Our outbuilding passed the city final inspection this week. So we will be closing out the contractors scope of work and moving to ours. During one of my walk throughs I noticed something about the breakers that seemed odd. My electrician did great work. Very clean and he was responsive and helpful. Even with the change orders (very few).
I documented the wire runs after rough in before drywall. He ran the circuits using 12 ga for the receptacle distribution, 12 ga for the feed line to the lighting circuits and 14 ga for the distribution lines to the lighting fixtures. I have no problems with that.
But he used 20 amp breakers for everything. So the lighting circuits (14 ga, LED cans, LED wall sconces) are all using 20 amp breakers. Granted the load will never get close to 20 amps on these circuits. But I was surprised that he used 20 amp for the lighting instead of 15 amp.
I looked it up in the NEC copy that I have but didn't really understand if this is allowed or not.
Is this an allowed condition or should I replace the 20 amp lighting circuit breakers with 15 amp?
I documented the wire runs after rough in before drywall. He ran the circuits using 12 ga for the receptacle distribution, 12 ga for the feed line to the lighting circuits and 14 ga for the distribution lines to the lighting fixtures. I have no problems with that.
But he used 20 amp breakers for everything. So the lighting circuits (14 ga, LED cans, LED wall sconces) are all using 20 amp breakers. Granted the load will never get close to 20 amps on these circuits. But I was surprised that he used 20 amp for the lighting instead of 15 amp.
I looked it up in the NEC copy that I have but didn't really understand if this is allowed or not.
Is this an allowed condition or should I replace the 20 amp lighting circuit breakers with 15 amp?
Last edited: