RCCB vs MCB – What’s the Difference? Malaysia Home Electrical Safety Guide

Electrical protection devices are essential in every Malaysian home. Yet many people remain confused between MCB and RCCB—which one prevents fire, which one protects human life, and which one should be installed in your DB (Distribution Board).

This guide explains both devices in a clear, practical way, based on real electrical standards and Malaysian installation practices.


What is an MCB? (Miniature Circuit Breaker)

An MCB protects your home from overload and short circuits.

How it protects your home

  • When too many appliances run on one circuit

  • When an appliance draws abnormal current

  • When a wire melts or touches another wire

  • When a device is faulty and sparks internally

The MCB senses excessive current and instantly trips to prevent overheating and fire.

Common appliances that trigger MCB

  • Iron

  • Water heater

  • Aircond

  • Microwave

  • Kettle

  • Washing machine

In simple words:

MCB protects your house and wiring from burning.


What is an RCCB? (Residual Current Circuit Breaker)

An RCCB protects human life from electric shock by detecting current leakage.

How it protects you

If electricity escapes from the system—through water, a metal body, or a human body—the RCCB detects the imbalance and trips within milliseconds, cutting the power supply.

When RCCB trips

  • Water leakage from heater or washing machine

  • Wet socket or exposed wiring

  • Faulty appliances causing leakage

  • Human contact with live wires (the most dangerous scenario)

In simple words:

RCCB protects you — MCB protects the house.


Key Differences Between MCB and RCCB

FeatureMCBRCCB
Primary FunctionProtects wiring & appliancesProtects human life
DetectsOverload & short circuitLeakage current
Trips WhenCurrent exceeds limitLive & neutral imbalance
Best Used ForAll circuits (lighting, socket, aircond)High-risk areas (bathroom, kitchen, outdoor)
Safety LevelBasicAdvanced

Do You Need Both MCB and RCCB?

Yes. Every modern home should have both.

MCB without RCCB = Fire protection only
RCCB without MCB = Shock protection but wiring can still burn

Together they form a complete electrical safety system.


Which One Should You Install in Malaysia?

Based on Malaysian household safety requirements:

For Every Home (Minimum Standard)

✔ 1 unit RCCB (63A / 100A depending on load)
✔ Individual MCBs for each circuit (6A / 10A / 16A / 20A / 32A)

For High-Risk Zones

✔ Aircond → 20A / 25A MCB
✔ Water Heater → 20A MCB + proper ELCB/RCCB
✔ Washing Machine → RCCB protection very important

Recommended Upgrade

If your house is older than 10 years:
✔ Replace old MCBs
✔ Install a proper RCCB
✔ Check for burnt or oversized wires

Our shop regularly sees houses in USJ & Subang Jaya where no RCCB is installed—this is extremely dangerous.


Signs You Should Replace Your MCB or RCCB

Replace MCB if:

  • It trips too easily

  • It gets hot

  • It has burn marks

  • It is older than 8–10 years

Replace RCCB if:

  • Test button (T) does not work

  • It trips frequently without reason

  • It does not trip during leakage

  • It is an outdated model

If your “TEST button” doesn’t trip when pressed — your RCCB is already failed.


Professional Installation & DB Inspection (Subang Jaya)

If you live anywhere around Subang Jaya, USJ, Puchong, Shah Alam or Klang Valley, you can visit our shop for:

✔ MCB replacement
✔ RCCB installation
✔ DB rewiring
✔ Home circuit inspection
✔ Electrical troubleshooting
✔ Aircond, wiring, renovation services

Shop Information

Sumon Electrical & Hardware Trading
Lot K10004, Ground Floor, Goodyear Court 7, USJ 14, Subang Jaya, Selangor
Google Maps: https://maps.app.goo.gl/CqTZ24KzNDvmfK1y8?g_st=awb

WhatsApp: +601116109510
Website: https://shababalsharif.com


Conclusion

MCB and RCCB are not alternatives—they work together.
One protects the electrical system; the other protects your life.
Installing both ensures maximum safety for your home, shop, or business.

If your DB is old, unstable, or frequently tripping, a quick inspection can prevent fire risks and electrical accidents.

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