AS/NZS 3080 and Structured Cabling Compliance in New Zealand: A Plain-English Guide

April 14, 2026

by Cabling For U

From Cabling For U, Auckland cabling installers delivering AS/NZS 3080 compliant work across the region.

If you’ve received a structured cabling quote that mentions “AS/NZS 3080 compliant” and you’re not sure what that means — or you’re about to spec a cabling project and want to make sure the contractor you choose actually meets the standard — this plain-English guide is for you.

What is AS/NZS 3080?

AS/NZS 3080 is the joint Australian and New Zealand standard for “Telecommunications installations — Generic cabling for commercial premises.” It’s the Australasian adaptation of the international ISO/IEC 11801 standard and the North American TIA-568 standard, combined and localised for NZ/AU conditions and electrical practice.

In short: it’s the rulebook that says how structured cabling should be planned, installed, terminated, tested and documented in New Zealand.

Does AS/NZS 3080 apply to my Auckland project?

It applies to any commercial, industrial, educational or institutional premises where generic structured cabling is installed. For residential work there’s a separate — simpler — standard (AS/CA S009 for the copper network interface). Most cabling installers just apply the commercial-grade rules by default even in residential.

The five pillars of AS/NZS 3080 compliance

1. Cable category matches application

The standard defines cable classes and categories. Class E (Cat6) and Class EA (Cat6A) are the current commercial defaults. The installer must select the correct category for the speeds and channel length required.

2. Maximum channel length

The channel (from patch panel, through horizontal cable, to the work area outlet and patch cord) must not exceed 100 m total, with permanent-link no more than 90 m. This isn’t just a recommendation — it’s enforced by Fluke test failures.

3. Termination and bend radius

Twisted pairs must be kept twisted to within 13 mm of the termination point. Bend radius must be at least 4× the cable diameter during install and 8× in permanent placement. These are the two most common physical causes of failed test reports.

4. Separation from power cabling

Data cables must be separated from 230/400V power cabling by defined minimum distances, depending on circuit current and cable type. Crossings must be at 90 degrees. Metal cable tray must be earthed.

5. Testing and documentation

Every channel must be tested with a certified field tester (typically a Fluke DSX or Versiv), with a printed report per run. The installer must also provide an as-built drawing, cable schedule, and identification labelling on both ends of every cable.

What does the test report actually contain?

A proper AS/NZS 3080 Fluke DSX test report records:

  • Wiremap — confirms every pin is terminated correctly
  • Length — measures channel and permanent-link distance
  • Insertion loss — signal lost across the channel
  • Return loss — signal reflected back by impedance mismatches
  • NEXT/PSNEXT — near-end crosstalk between pairs
  • ACR-F/PSACR-F — far-end crosstalk
  • Propagation delay and delay skew

The summary is pass/fail against the class (E, EA, F, etc.) and each measurement is recorded with margin to the limit.

Why compliance matters for your Auckland business

  • Insurance — major insurers ask about structured cabling compliance when assessing business cover
  • Landlord requirements — most Auckland commercial leases now require certified cabling for any tenant fit-out
  • Warranty support — cable manufacturers only warrant 20 to 25 year system performance on compliant installs
  • Building code — fire-stopping of cable penetrations is a building-code matter, not a nice-to-have
  • Resale value — a clean AS/NZS 3080 cable plant adds to commercial property value and reduces due-diligence friction at sale

How to tell if your quote is actually compliant

Five questions to ask a prospective cabling contractor:

  1. Is AS/NZS 3080 (or ISO/IEC 11801) explicitly mentioned in your scope?
  2. Do you provide a per-run Fluke DSX channel or permanent-link test report?
  3. Is fire-stopping included for all penetrations?
  4. Will you provide a labelled cable schedule and as-built drawing?
  5. Do you offer a cable-plant warranty of at least 12 months?

If the answer to any of these is vague, keep shopping. A true compliance install doesn’t cost dramatically more — maybe 5–10% — but the downstream value is decades.

Common non-compliance issues we rework

  • Cables bundled too tightly with cable ties, causing channel failure under load
  • No fire-stopping through fire-rated walls
  • T568A and T568B terminations mixed within the same install
  • Patch panel port numbers don’t match outlet labelling
  • No test report at all — or a test report with failures marked “acceptable”
  • Cables run parallel to power cabling within shared conduit

We regularly quote rework on non-compliant Auckland installs. Usually it’s 30–50% of the original build cost to bring up to standard — more than the premium would have been.

Related standards to know

  • AS/NZS 3000 — electrical wiring rules (the “wiring rules”)
  • AS/NZS 3084 — telecommunications pathways and spaces
  • AS/NZS 3085 — administration of structured cabling (labelling, records)
  • ISO/IEC 14763-3 — optical fibre testing
  • AS/NZS 2201 — intruder alarm systems (for alarm cabling)

Frequently asked questions

Is AS/NZS 3080 a legal requirement in New Zealand?

It's not a specific act of Parliament, but it's referenced in building codes, insurance contracts, and commercial leases across Auckland. In practice, any serious commercial cabling contract specifies AS/NZS 3080 compliance as a baseline.

What's the difference between permanent-link and channel testing?

Permanent-link testing covers the in-wall cable plus the patch panel and outlet — the parts that stay. Channel testing adds the patch cords at both ends. AS/NZS 3080 requires one of these, usually channel, and good installers provide both reports.

How often should structured cabling be re-certified?

Professional cabling installed to AS/NZS 3080 doesn't need routine re-certification. You re-test when you change the cable plant, suspect a fault, or inherit a site with no test records. Test results are valid for the life of the install as long as no physical changes are made.

Can any electrician install AS/NZS 3080 compliant cabling?

Structured cabling is not restricted electrical work, so no electrical licence is required. But AS/NZS 3080 compliance requires specific training, equipment (Fluke DSX is $30,000+) and experience. Most electricians don't hold those. Use a dedicated certified cabling installer for commercial work.

Does AS/NZS 3080 cover fibre optic cabling?

Yes, partly. AS/NZS 3080 sets the installation requirements and testing criteria, while detailed optical fibre testing is covered by ISO/IEC 14763-3. For a compliant fibre install, your contractor should provide both AS/NZS 3080 channel testing and an OTDR trace per strand.

Do you provide AS/NZS 3080 test reports with every install?

Yes. Cabling For U provides Fluke DSX channel test reports for every run we install, along with an as-built drawing, cable schedule, and labelled patch panel. This is part of our standard delivery — no extra charge — for every Auckland commercial project.

Ready for a compliant install?

If you’d like a fixed-price quote that includes AS/NZS 3080 compliance, certification and full documentation, book a free Auckland site survey or call 0800 222 546. See our structured cabling services for scope.

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Send Us an Email

admin@cablingforu.co.nz

Call Us

0800-222-546

Showroom Address

3 Morningside Drive, Morningside, Auckland 1025

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