Direct Answer: IP20 for indoor dry spaces, IP44 for bathrooms and kitchens, IP65 for outdoor and industrial, IP67 for submersible and landscape. Approximately ~35% of outdoor LED failures are caused by moisture ingress from insufficient IP rating. Choosing IP65 instead of IP44 costs only 15–25% more but cuts failure rates by 70%+ — making it the most cost-effective insurance policy in outdoor lighting procurement.
An IP (Ingress Protection) rating is a two-digit code defined by IEC 60529. The first digit (0–6) indicates protection against solid objects and dust. The second digit (0–9) indicates protection against water. An "X" in either position means that protection level was not tested. Understanding the exact meaning of each digit prevents the most common procurement error: assuming a rating covers more than it actually does.
| IP Rating | Dust Protection | Water Protection | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| IP20 | >12mm objects (fingers) | No water protection | Offices, bedrooms, retail |
| IP44 | >1mm objects (tools, wires) | Splashing water from any direction | Bathrooms (zone 2), covered outdoor |
| IP65 | Dust-tight (complete protection) | Water jets (6.3mm nozzle, 12.5 L/min) | Outdoor walls, parking, washdown |
| IP66 | Dust-tight | Powerful water jets (12.5mm nozzle, 100 L/min) | Ports, tunnels, car washes |
| IP67 | Dust-tight | Temporary immersion (1m depth, 30 minutes) | Landscape, flood zones |
The difference between an IP44 and IP65 specification isn't academic — it shows up as real failures, warranty claims, and replacement costs. The table below is based on aggregated field data from commercial and industrial LED installations across North America and Europe.
| Installation Location | Required IP | Common Mistake | Failure Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residential indoor | IP20 | — | <1% |
| Bathroom (zone 1/2) | IP44 min | IP20 in zone 2 | 8–12% |
| Covered outdoor | IP44 | IP20 | 15–20% within 3yr |
| Uncovered outdoor | IP65 min | IP44 | 25–35% within 3yr |
| Coastal outdoor | IP65 (marine) | Standard IP65 | 30–40% within 2yr |
| Industrial washdown | IP66 | IP65 | 20% within 1yr |
| In-ground/landscape | IP67 | IP65 | 90% within 6mo |
Match the IP rating to the actual environmental exposure — not the perceived risk. The most common mistake is underestimating moisture in "sheltered" outdoor locations.
| Location | Minimum IP | Recommended IP | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home interior | IP20 | IP20 | No moisture exposure — standard indoor fixtures are fully adequate and cost-optimized. |
| Kitchen (away from sink) | IP20 | IP44 | Steam from cooking and occasional splashes can reach ceiling fixtures. IP44 provides margin against condensation without significant cost increase. |
| Bathroom (above shower) | IP44 | IP65 | Zone 1 per IEC 60364-7-701 requires IP65. This is not optional — it's an electrical safety code requirement. Direct steam and water spray are expected conditions. |
| Covered porch/eave | IP44 | IP44 | Protected from direct rain but wind-blown splash can reach. IP44 is usually sufficient; upgrade to IP65 if the eave is shallow (<1m overhang). |
| Uncovered wall mount | IP65 | IP65 | Direct rain exposure. IP44 fails here — wind-driven rain penetrates at angles the IP44 splash test doesn't cover. |
| Beachside/coastal | IP65 | IP66 | Salt spray is more penetrating than fresh water and accelerates gasket degradation. IP66 with marine-grade 316 stainless steel hardware is essential within 5km of saltwater. |
| Landscape in-ground | IP67 | IP67 | Submersion is normal after rain and irrigation. IP65 is completely inadequate — expect near-certain failure. For areas with standing water, IP68 is safer. |
This is the most expensive assumption in outdoor lighting procurement. A covered porch, eave, or canopy protects against direct rainfall — but wind-blown rain routinely reaches fixtures at angles the IP44 splash test doesn't cover. Humidity and condensation are also constant threats: a covered outdoor fixture experiences daily temperature swings that create internal condensation even without direct water contact. For any outdoor location — covered or not — IP65 is the safer default. The premium is small; the consequence of being wrong is a full fixture replacement including labor.
IP ratings are tested on new fixtures with fresh gaskets in laboratory conditions. Real-world aging — UV exposure, thermal cycling, chemical exposure — degrades gasket materials over time. After 3 years of outdoor UV exposure, an IP65 fixture may effectively perform at only IP44 levels as silicone gaskets harden and lose elasticity. Spec silicone gaskets (5–7 year outdoor life) or premium EPDM (10+ years) for any outdoor installation. Budget for gasket inspection and replacement as part of routine maintenance — a $2 gasket replaced on schedule prevents a $200 fixture replacement.
IEC 60364-7-701 defines three bathroom zones with specific IP requirements — and they are not optional recommendations, they are electrical safety code. Zone 0 (inside the bath or shower tray) requires IP67 — these fixtures can be submerged. Zone 1 (directly above the bath or shower, up to 2.25m height) requires IP65 as a minimum. Zone 2 (0.6m perimeter around the bath, up to 2.25m) requires IP44 minimum. Installing an IP20 fixture in Zone 2 is both unsafe and non-compliant — and in the event of a water damage claim, insurance assessors will check for correct IP ratings. Non-compliant fixtures = denied claims.
No. While a covered area may seem dry, three environmental factors make IP20 unsuitable for any outdoor location: (1) Humidity and condensation — daily temperature swings cause moisture to form inside unsealed fixtures. (2) Wind-blown rain — IP20 provides zero protection against water from any direction, and wind can drive rain horizontally under covers. (3) Dust and insects — IP20's >12mm object protection allows insects, spiders, and debris to enter the fixture, creating additional failure modes.
Minimum for any outdoor location is IP44 — and if there's any chance of wind-blown rain reaching the fixture, IP65 is the safer choice. The cost difference between IP20 and IP65 for a standard wall light is typically $8–15 — far less than one service call to replace a failed fixture.
Silicone gaskets: 5–7 years. Premium EPDM gaskets: 10+ years. Gasket lifespan depends on material quality, UV exposure, temperature extremes, and chemical exposure (salt, industrial cleaners).
Signs of gasket degradation include: visible cracking or crumbling when touched, loss of elasticity (gasket feels hard/stiff, not rubbery), discoloration (especially yellowing of clear silicone), and water or condensation visible inside the fixture after rain.
Maintenance best practice: Inspect all outdoor fixture gaskets annually. Replace any gasket showing signs of hardening or cracking — a $2–5 gasket replaced preventively avoids a $150–400 fixture replacement plus labor. For coastal installations, halve the inspection interval: check every 6 months.
Zone 2 (0.6m+ from bath/shower edge): yes, IP44 is the minimum requirement. Zone 1 (directly above bath/shower): no — IP65 is required by code per IEC 60364-7-701. Zone 0 (inside bath/shower tray): IP67 is required.
For bathrooms outside the EU, local electrical codes may differ, but the IEC standard is the global reference. Even where local code allows lower ratings, following IEC zone requirements is the safest practice — bathroom electrical accidents are among the most lethal domestic incidents, and IP rating compliance is the primary defense against water-ingress electrocution risk.
Practical recommendation: For any bathroom fixture, spec IP65 regardless of zone. The cost difference between IP44 and IP65 bathroom-rated fixtures is minimal ($5–15), and IP65 provides full protection against steam, condensation, and accidental direct spray — covering you regardless of exact zone placement.
Compare IP65, IP66, IP67, and IP69K LED fixtures — verified ratings with LM-79 test reports from 89,000+ products across 24 categories
Search and Compare Rated LED Fixtures →Filter by IP rating, material (316 stainless, die-cast aluminum, polycarbonate), and certification — free for verified B2B buyers