GFCI Receptacle vs GFCI Breaker — Which Protection Goes Where
Claim: GFCI protection can be delivered at the outlet (GFCI receptacle) or at the panel (GFCI breaker); the right choice depends on whether you need one accessible reset point or full-circuit coverage — and the cost difference is roughly 3–5× per protected location.
Mechanism
Both a GFCI receptacle and a GFCI breaker detect the same fault condition (>5 mA current imbalance between hot and neutral) and trip the same way (cut the circuit). The delivery point is what differs:
GFCI receptacle:
- Installed at the outlet box in the wall
- Protects that outlet plus any additional outlets wired to its LOAD terminals
- Reset button is on the outlet face — reset at the point of use
- Part cost: CAD 35; one per outlet location (or per chain of downstream outlets)
- Best for: retrofit situations where only 1–3 outlets in a room need protection; bathrooms; kitchen counter locations; easy-access locations where someone can reach the outlet to reset it
GFCI breaker:
- Installed at the electrical panel in place of a standard breaker
- Protects every outlet, light fixture, and hardwired appliance on that circuit
- Reset is at the panel — inconvenient if the panel is in a separate room or stairwell
- Part cost: CAD 150+ per breaker; one per circuit
- Best for: new construction or full renovation where all outlets on a circuit need protection; garage circuits with multiple outlets; spa, pool, or hot tub circuits; situations where the outlet is not easily accessible for reset (e.g. behind an appliance)
The decision rule
| Situation | Use |
|---|---|
| Bathroom — 1–2 outlets near sink/tub | GFCI receptacle at the first outlet; downstream outlets wired from LOAD terminals |
| Kitchen counter — outlets within 1.5 m of sink | GFCI receptacle at the first outlet in the counter chain |
| Exterior single outlet | GFCI receptacle (weatherproof cover required separately) |
| Garage — multiple outlets, possibly behind vehicles | GFCI breaker for the whole circuit — easier to protect all at once |
| Spa or hot tub circuit | GFCI breaker — higher amperage, full-circuit protection required |
| Unfinished basement — several outlets | GFCI breaker or GFCI receptacle at first accessible outlet with downstream LOAD wiring |
| Outlet not accessible for reset (behind fridge, appliance) | GFCI breaker at panel — reset accessible at panel |
Scope — what this does NOT cover
- AFCI (arc-fault) protection — a separate device and requirement for bedroom and living-area circuits
- Installation specifics — both methods require a licensed electrician in BC for new installation or circuit work; like-for-like GFCI receptacle swap (same location) by a licensed contractor does not require a permit
- Cost triangulation — see gfci-outlets (Home Systems) § “Typical cost” for the full tier table
Sources
Idea Compass
North: Where this comes from
- GFCI Required Locations in BC — Canadian Electrical Code Rule 26-700 (Home Systems) — the code mandate that creates the need for GFCI protection
- gfci-outlets (Home Systems) — the parent component note
East: Tensions / failure
- GFCI receptacle reset is at the outlet — if the outlet is inaccessible, you cannot reset without reaching it; GFCI breaker is the solution
- cost asymmetry: GFCI breaker costs 3–5× more per location but covers an entire circuit
South: Where this leads
- electrical-panel (Home Systems) — where GFCI breakers live; the upstream system
- gfci-outlets (Home Systems) § “How to maintain it” — the monthly test is the same regardless of delivery method
West: What’s similar
- the GFCI receptacle vs breaker choice is structurally similar to a zone valve vs whole-building shutoff in plumbing: local control at lower cost, or circuit-level control at higher cost
- shutoff-valves (Home Systems) — the fixture-level vs in-suite-main tradeoff in plumbing is the same design pattern