SPD Uc and MCOV ratings can look different from one country or project market to another. The reason is not the country name alone. It is usually a mix of service voltage, earthing system, connection mode, grid condition, standard style, and project documentation.
Quick answer: SPD Uc or MCOV ratings are not fixed by country. Europe, North America, China, the Middle East, and other export markets may use different voltage references, wording, and project rules. Buyers should confirm the real service voltage, earthing system, protection mode, applicable standard, and datasheet before choosing a final SPD rating.
Table of Contents
Why Country Alone Is Not Enough
Many buyers ask a simple question: which SPD Uc or MCOV should be used for a specific country? The safer answer is: start with the country, but do not stop there. A country name does not fully describe the electrical system.
The same country can have different project types, utility voltages, earthing arrangements, industrial systems, consultant specifications, and imported equipment requirements. This is why a catalogue value that is common in one market should not be treated as a fixed national rule.
In IEC-based documents, buyers usually see Uc. In UL 1449-style documents, buyers usually see MCOV. In GB/T 18802.1-style or local IEC-based documents, buyers commonly see Uc-style wording. The wording should match the target market, datasheet, marking, and approval route.
Important: this article gives market-facing references, not final project design rules. The final SPD Uc or MCOV value should be confirmed with the approved product datasheet, applicable standard, local requirement, and electrical design.
Common Country and Market Patterns
The table below shows how buyers often see Uc or MCOV ratings in different country and market contexts. It is designed for export communication and catalogue comparison, not as a fixed country selection table.
| Market or region | Common document style | What buyers often see | What must be confirmed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Europe and many IEC-style markets | IEC-style datasheets using Uc. | 230/400V systems often lead buyers to compare common Uc values such as 275V, 320V, or 385V. | Confirm earthing system, SPD connection mode, Up, TOV condition, and local project specification. |
| North America and UL-style projects | UL 1449-style documents using MCOV. | Buyers may compare MCOV against 120/240V, 208Y/120V, 277/480V, or other service-voltage systems. | Confirm service voltage, split-phase or wye arrangement, product marking, and listing or approval status. |
| China and GB/T 18802.1-style markets | GB/T-style or IEC-based documents using Uc. | Low-voltage AC projects often refer to 220/380V or 230/400V class systems and Uc-style datasheets. | Confirm project voltage, local document wording, test report basis, and product model marking. |
| Middle East export projects | Often IEC-style, but consultant or project specifications may vary. | Buyers may ask for IEC-style SPDs, European-brand equivalents, or specific project-approved ratings. | Confirm project specification, utility voltage, panel design, consultant requirement, and certification request. |
| Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America export markets | Mixed IEC-style, local standard, or project-based requirements. | Buyers may focus on voltage margin because grid condition and project quality can vary by site. | Confirm real site voltage, grid stability, generator use, earthing system, and required documents. |
| Australia / New Zealand style projects | IEC-related and local standard/project documentation. | 230/400V-class systems may still require local project checks before confirming the final Uc. | Confirm local compliance path, service voltage, installation requirement, and datasheet wording. |
Uc wording is common
Buyers often compare values such as 275V, 320V, or 385V for 230/400V-class systems.
MCOV wording is common
Buyers may compare MCOV against 120/240V, 208Y/120V, 277/480V, or other service-voltage systems.
Uc-style documents are common
Projects may refer to 220/380V or 230/400V class systems and GB/T 18802.1-style documentation.
Project specifications matter
Buyers may request IEC-style SPDs, European-brand equivalents, or project-approved ratings.
Site conditions vary
Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America projects may involve mixed local requirements and unstable grids.
Local checks are still needed
230/400V-class systems may still require local project checks before confirming Uc.
What Actually Changes the SPD Uc or MCOV Rating?
When ratings vary by country or market, the real reason is usually one of the factors below. These factors affect the voltage that the SPD protection mode must withstand continuously.
| Factor | Why it changes the rating | Buyer should confirm |
|---|---|---|
| Nominal service voltage | Different countries and projects may use 120V, 230/400V, 400/415V, 480V, or other systems. | Actual system voltage and whether the SPD sees L-N, L-PE, N-PE, or L-L voltage. |
| Earthing system | TN, TT, IT, and split-phase systems can change the voltage reference for SPD selection. | TN-S, TN-C-S, TT, IT, split-phase, or special project arrangement. |
| Connection mode | The continuous voltage across the SPD depends on how it is connected in the panel. | L-N, L-PE, N-PE, 3+1, 4P, or the panel wiring diagram. |
| Grid condition | Unstable voltage, generator supply, or temporary overvoltage can increase long-term SPD stress. | Stable utility, unstable grid, generator-fed system, or expected TOV condition. |
| Standard and document style | IEC-style, UL-style, GB/T-style, and project documents may use different terms and marking logic. | Uc or MCOV wording, certification route, label requirement, and datasheet format. |
| Protected equipment sensitivity | A higher Uc or MCOV may give more continuous voltage margin, but it does not automatically mean better protection. | Voltage protection level Up, equipment withstand level, and required surge protection class. |
Professional rule: do not map a country directly to one SPD voltage rating. Map the project system first, then confirm the suitable Uc or MCOV value from the datasheet and project requirement.
How OEM Buyers Should Compare Country Requirements
For OEM and private label SPD orders, the target country is useful information. But it is not enough to confirm the final product label or datasheet. Buyers should send a complete project and documentation profile to the supplier.
- Target country or region for the SPD order.
- Required document style: IEC-style, UL-style, GB/T-style, or local project format.
- Nominal service voltage: 120V, 230/400V, 400/415V, 480V, or other.
- Earthing system: TN-S, TN-C-S, TT, IT, split-phase, or special arrangement.
- SPD type and installation position: Type 1, Type 2, Type 1+2, main panel, sub-panel, or equipment panel.
- Protection mode and pole structure: L-N, L-PE, N-PE, 3+1, 4P, or other wiring diagram.
- Required wording on product label: Uc, MCOV, or both if allowed by the document package.
- Required datasheet, packaging, model code, and test file consistency.
- Any consultant-approved brand equivalent, voltage rating, or project specification.
Send us the target country, service voltage, earthing system, panel wiring, required standard, and label requirement. We can help review whether the Uc or MCOV wording and rating direction are consistent with your export order.
Check Country and Rating RequirementPractical Examples: Read the System, Not Only the Country
Example 1: A European-style 230/400V distribution board
Buyers may commonly compare IEC-style Uc values such as 275V, 320V, or 385V. The final value should still be checked with the earthing system, connection mode, grid stability, and voltage protection level. For detailed selection between these values, use our AC SPD Uc selection guide.
Example 2: A North American-style 120/240V or 277/480V system
Buyers usually see MCOV rather than Uc in UL-style documents. The correct MCOV must be compared with the real service voltage and system arrangement. MCOV wording alone does not prove that the SPD is UL listed or approved.
Example 3: A Middle East project using IEC-style equipment
The project may use IEC-style products, but the consultant specification may still require a certain datasheet format, brand equivalent, voltage rating, or certification document. In this case, the buyer should not choose by country name only. The project specification should be checked before confirming the OEM label.
Example 4: An export panel for a market with unstable grid voltage
A buyer may ask for more continuous voltage margin because the grid often runs high. This can make 320V or 385V appear more attractive in some IEC-style catalogues. But a higher Uc is not automatically better. Up, protected equipment sensitivity, and datasheet approval still matter.
Common Mistakes When Comparing SPD Ratings by Country
Mistake 1: Thinking one country has one fixed SPD Uc
A country may have common project patterns, but the final rating depends on system voltage, earthing arrangement, connection mode, and local project documents.
Mistake 2: Copying a European Uc value into a UL-style project
IEC-style Uc and UL-style MCOV have a similar selection role, but the document style, label wording, and certification path are different.
Mistake 3: Choosing higher Uc or MCOV only because the grid is unstable
More continuous voltage margin can reduce unwanted stress in some systems, but it may also affect the protection level. The complete datasheet must be reviewed.
Mistake 4: Ignoring consultant or project specifications
In export projects, the project specification can be more important than a general country habit. Always check the approved specification before printing OEM labels or datasheets.
Mistake 5: Treating MCOV wording as proof of UL listing
MCOV is a rating term. It does not automatically prove UL listing, approval, or market access. Certification status should be confirmed separately.
FAQ: SPD Uc and MCOV Ratings by Country
Are SPD Uc ratings fixed by country?
No. A country may have common voltage systems and documentation habits, but SPD Uc or MCOV should be confirmed by service voltage, earthing system, connection mode, grid condition, and product datasheet.
Why does Europe often use Uc while North America uses MCOV?
IEC-style SPD datasheets commonly use Uc, while UL 1449-style documents commonly use MCOV. Both help buyers check continuous voltage suitability, but the wording and documentation should follow the target market and approval route.
Should I choose 385V SPD for countries with unstable grids?
Not automatically. A higher Uc may provide more continuous voltage margin, but the final selection should also check Up, protected equipment sensitivity, connection mode, TOV condition, and datasheet approval.
Can the same SPD model be sold in different countries?
Sometimes, but not by assumption. The buyer should confirm voltage rating, label wording, datasheet language, certification requirement, packaging, and local project acceptance before using one model in multiple markets.
Does MCOV wording mean the SPD is UL listed?
No. MCOV wording does not automatically mean UL listed or UL approved. Certification status and listing documents should be checked separately from the voltage term used on the datasheet.
What should I send to a supplier before asking for SPD rating by country?
Send the target country, service voltage, earthing system, SPD type, connection mode, expected grid condition, required standard, label wording, and any project specification or approved brand reference.
How is this page different from an SPD Uc calculation guide?
This page explains why ratings vary by country, market, and power system. A calculation guide focuses more deeply on TN, TT, IT, split-phase systems, IEC-style calculation anchors, and protection-mode voltage checks.
Related SPD Uc / MCOV Guides
This article is part of our SPD Uc and MCOV guide series. Use the guides below to compare cross-market terminology, calculation logic, common rating values, OEM documentation, and practical AC SPD Uc selection.
-
SPD Uc and MCOV Selection Across IEC, UL and Export Markets
A full overview of why Uc and MCOV ratings vary across IEC-style, UL-style, GB/T-style and export markets. -
SPD Uc Selection Guide for Distribution Boards and OEM Orders
A practical guide for choosing 275V, 320V, 385V or 440V AC SPD options for panels and OEM orders. -
SPD Uc Calculation for TN, TT, IT and Split-Phase Systems
A calculation-focused guide for checking SPD Uc against earthing systems, connection modes and system voltage. -
SPD Uc vs MCOV: Difference for OEM Labels and Datasheets
A guide for OEM buyers who need to align Uc, MCOV, product labels, datasheets, packaging and test files. -
Common SPD Uc and MCOV Ratings: 150V, 275V, 320V, 385V, 440V and 480V
A catalogue-style explanation of common Uc and MCOV rating values and where buyers often see them.
