NEC Article 680

NEC 680: Swimming Pools, Fountains, and Similar Installations

Written by a licensed IBEW journeyman electrician  ·  Updated May 2026 ·  Reviewed for NEC accuracy

What This Article Covers

NEC Article 680 covers swimming pools, spas, hot tubs, fountains, and similar installations. It is one of the most safety-critical articles in the NEC because water and electricity together have killed people.

Key Requirements

  • GFCI protection required for receptacles within 20 ft of pool water
  • Equipotential bonding grid surrounding the pool (680.26)
  • Underwater luminaires must be listed for the application and supplied by GFCI
  • Receptacles, switches, and luminaires must be located at minimum distances from pool water
  • Listed pool pump motor disconnect within sight

Common Field Applications

  • New residential pool install — bonding grid is the big one
  • Spa or hot tub on a 50A GFCI breaker
  • Replacing an underwater light

Common Mistakes & Inspection Failures

  • Inadequate or missing equipotential bonding grid
  • Using non-GFCI receptacles near pool deck
  • Underwater light not on GFCI

Related NEC Articles

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does NEC 680 cover?

NEC Article 680 covers swimming pools, spas, hot tubs, fountains, and similar installations. It is one of the most safety-critical articles in the NEC because water and electricity together have killed people.

What are the key requirements of NEC 680?

Key requirements include: GFCI protection required for receptacles within 20 ft of pool water; Equipotential bonding grid surrounding the pool (680.26); Underwater luminaires must be listed for the application and supplied by GFCI. See the full requirements list on this page.

What are common mistakes with NEC 680?

Inadequate or missing equipotential bonding grid Using non-GFCI receptacles near pool deck Underwater light not on GFCI

Related Resources

Michael B. — IBEW Local 134 Journeyman Electrician

Michael B.

IBEW Local 134 Journeyman Electrician · Licensed Electrical Contractor

Michael is a licensed electrical contractor and IBEW Local 134 journeyman with years of field experience. He built Sparky AI after ChatGPT gave him wrong NEC code information on a job — costing him $800 in callbacks. Every answer in Sparky AI is verified against the actual NEC.