NEMA & IP Standards Suite

Compare NEMA and IP enclosure ratings and review key test-condition differences.

Conversion Parameters

Equivalent Standard

IP66
⚠️ Engineering Warning: NEMA 4X incorporates severe testing for Ice formation and Corrosion resistance. IP66 only certifies protection against dust and powerful water jets, meaning an IP66 enclosure cannot be safely substituted for NEMA 4X without additional environmental testing.

Interactive Environment Test Profile

Official Export Snippet

IP (Ingress Protection) Guide

IP55
Solid Protection
Dust protected. Ingress of dust is not entirely prevented, but it must not enter in sufficient quantity to interfere with the satisfactory operation of the equipment.
Approximate opening reference: not specified for this protection level.
Liquid Protection
Protected against water jets from any angle.

NEMA Enclosure Guide

TYPE 4
Description & Application
Watertight and dust-tight. Intended for indoor or outdoor use to provide a degree of protection against falling dirt, rain, sleet, snow, windblown dust, splashing water, and hose-directed water. Undamaged by the external formation of ice on the enclosure.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can an IP rating be directly converted to a NEMA rating?

Not exactly. NEMA and IP ratings are based on different test methods and environmental assumptions, so a direct one-to-one substitution is not always valid.

Why is NEMA 4X not the same as IP66?

NEMA 4X includes additional corrosion and external icing considerations that are not fully represented by an IP66 enclosure rating.

The Asymmetry of NEMA 250 and IEC 60529 (IP) Ratings

In modern industrial engineering, correctly specifying the environmental enclosure rating is critical for safety. Two dominant standards exist: the North American NEMA 250 and the international IEC 60529 (IP code). These standards have fundamentally different testing regimens, making 1:1 mapping impossible.

Engineering Risks During Cross-Referencing

Because NEMA requirements are a superset of IP requirements, substituting an IP-rated enclosure into a NEMA-specified environment carries significant risk. A NEMA rating can consistently meet or exceed its corresponding IP rating, but an IP rating cannot satisfy a NEMA requirement without supplementary environmental validations.