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Article 645 of the National Electrical Code has always been a source of debate, mostly because of the way it handles emergency power off requirements in information technology equipment rooms. For years, designers who wanted to avoid installing the big red emergency power off (EPO) button have taken advantage of a specific section that allowed them to “design out” of the rule. The upcoming 2026 NEC keeps the intent of Article 645 but moves some key language and updates the cross references. Anyone who enforces or designs according to this article needs to know exactly what changed and what did not.
What 645.4 said in the 2023 NEC:
In the 2023 edition, Section 645.4 spelled out the trade-off. It permitted alternative wiring methods, shortcuts to the standard Chapter 3 wiring rules and to the signaling and optical fiber wiring rules in Articles 725 and 770, if six specific conditions were met. These conditions required:
2026 Draft: 645.4 Disappears
In the 2026 draft, section 645.4 is gone, but the substance is not. The same six conditions are now located in 645.5 with updated references:
The reorganization does not change the ability to design out of Article 645. The path is simply relocated. If a designer chooses to build the IT space to standard Chapter 3 wiring methods and does not claim the alternative wiring allowances now described in 645.5, then Article 645 and with it the 645.10 emergency power off requirement does not apply.
What 645.4 said in the 2023 NEC:
In the 2023 edition, Section 645.4 spelled out the trade-off. It permitted alternative wiring methods, shortcuts to the standard Chapter 3 wiring rules and to the signaling and optical fiber wiring rules in Articles 725 and 770, if six specific conditions were met. These conditions required:
- a disconnecting means that it complied with 645.10
- a dedicated HVAC system or a shared system with smoke dampers that close when the disconnect is operated or when smoke is detected
- all ITE and communications equipment in the room to be listed
- the room to be occupied and accessible only to personnel needed for maintenance and operation
- fire resistance separation from other occupancies
- only equipment associated with the operation of the ITE room to be installed inside
2026 Draft: 645.4 Disappears
In the 2026 draft, section 645.4 is gone, but the substance is not. The same six conditions are now located in 645.5 with updated references:
- The old references to Chapter 3, Article 725, and Article 770 are replaced with new references to Article 722, specifically 722.120 for signaling wiring and 722.160 for optical fiber cabling.
- The language of the conditions themselves is virtually unchanged.
- The informational notes have been updated to match the latest editions of NFPA 75.
The reorganization does not change the ability to design out of Article 645. The path is simply relocated. If a designer chooses to build the IT space to standard Chapter 3 wiring methods and does not claim the alternative wiring allowances now described in 645.5, then Article 645 and with it the 645.10 emergency power off requirement does not apply.