Colorado vs Kansas Electrical Code
Side-by-side comparison
| Factor | Colorado | Kansas |
|---|---|---|
| NEC edition | NEC 2023 | NEC 2008 |
| Compliance score | 80/100 (Moderate) | 22/100 (Minimal) |
| Electrician license | Required | Not required statewide |
| License name | Master/Journeyman Electrician License | No statewide license required |
| Permits required | Yes | Yes |
| State amendments | No | No |
| Homeowner exempt | Yes | Yes |
Key differences
- Colorado uses a more recent NEC edition (2023 vs 2008), meaning it has the latest safety requirements including expanded GFCI coverage and updated load calculation methods.
- Colorado requires a statewide electrician license while Kansas does not, meaning licensing in Kansas is handled at the city/county level.
Licensing requirements
Colorado
Colorado requires a Master/Journeyman Electrician License through the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA). Homeowners are exempt for work on their own primary residence.
Kansas
Kansas does not require a statewide electrician license. Requirements are set by local jurisdictions.
Wire sizing is identical. NEC Table 310.16 ampacity values have not changed since NEC 2017. Whether you are wiring in Colorado or Kansas, a 20A circuit uses 12 AWG copper and a 30A circuit uses 10 AWG copper. The differences between states are in code enforcement, not in the wire sizing itself.
GFCI requirement differences
Because Colorado uses NEC 2023 and Kansas uses NEC 2008, there are differences in GFCI coverage:
| Location | Colorado (NEC 2023) | Kansas (NEC 2008) |
|---|---|---|
| Kitchen | All receptacles including refrigerator | Countertop within 6 ft of sink only |
| Basement | All areas (finished and unfinished) | Unfinished areas only |
| Laundry | All laundry receptacles | Within 6 ft of sink |
| Bathroom | All receptacles (same in both) | |
| Outdoor | All receptacles (same in both) | |
| Garage | All receptacles (same in both) | |
Frequently asked questions
Which state has stricter electrical codes, Colorado or Kansas?
Colorado has stricter enforcement with a score of 80/100 vs 22/100. The score reflects NEC edition recency, licensing requirements, permit enforcement, and state amendments.
Is my electrician license from Colorado valid in Kansas?
Electrician licenses are generally not transferable between states. If you hold a license in Colorado, you will typically need to apply separately in Kansas. Some states offer reciprocity agreements, but these vary. Contact the licensing authority in Kansas directly for requirements.
Is the wire size different in Colorado vs Kansas?
No. Wire sizing per NEC Table 310.16 is identical regardless of which NEC edition a state enforces. A 20A circuit requires 12 AWG copper in both Colorado and Kansas. The ampacity values have not changed since NEC 2017.
Do both Colorado and Kansas require electrical permits?
Both states require electrical permits for most work. Common permit-required projects in both states include new circuits, panel upgrades, service changes, and EV charger installations.
Does the NEC edition difference between Colorado and Kansas matter for my project?
For most residential work (circuits, outlets, fixtures), the NEC edition difference has minimal practical impact because wire sizing tables are unchanged. The biggest difference is GFCI coverage: NEC 2023 requires GFCI in all kitchen outlets and finished basements, while older editions are narrower. If you are doing a kitchen or basement remodel, the edition difference matters.
NEC 2023 references verified April 2026