Buyer’s guide
MCB vs MCCB: Which to Use
How to choose between miniature and moulded-case circuit breakers — ratings, breaking capacity and where each belongs.
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Overview
MCB vs MCCB: Which to Use
Miniature circuit breakers (MCBs) and moulded-case circuit breakers (MCCBs) do the same fundamental job — protect a circuit against overload and short-circuit — but they are built for different parts of the installation. Choosing the wrong one wastes money at best and leaves a circuit under-protected at worst.
This guide explains the practical differences, the parameters that decide the choice, and where each device belongs in a typical low-voltage system, so you can specify with confidence. Emirates Panel supplies both as an authorized distributor for ABB, Lovato and Alfanar.
The basics
What separates an MCB from an MCCB
An MCB is a small, fixed-trip device for final circuits — typically up to 125 A, with breaking capacities around 6–10 kA. It protects lighting, sockets and small loads, and is usually DIN-rail mounted in a distribution board.
An MCCB is larger and more capable — ratings to 1600 A and beyond, breaking capacities of 25–100 kA, and (on many models) adjustable trip settings. It protects feeders, sub-mains and larger loads, and is the workhorse of main and sub-distribution boards.
- MCB: final circuits, ≤125 A, ~6–10 kA, fixed trip
- MCCB: feeders & mains, to 1600 A+, 25–100 kA, often adjustable


Breaking capacity
The parameter that must not be guessed
Breaking capacity (Icu/Ics, in kA) is the maximum fault current the breaker can safely interrupt. It must equal or exceed the prospective fault current at the point of installation — a figure that comes from the upstream transformer’s impedance and the cable between.
Get this wrong and the breaker can fail catastrophically during a fault. Use the fault-current calculator to estimate the level, then select a device whose kA rating covers it with margin. This is the single most important number in the selection.
Where each belongs
A simple rule of thumb
Work down from the source. The incomer and main feeders need MCCBs sized for the load and the high fault level near the transformer. As you move downstream to sub-distribution and final circuits, fault levels fall and loads shrink, so MCBs become appropriate and far more economical.
Mixing the two correctly — MCCBs upstream, MCBs at the edges — gives a coordinated, cost-effective design where each device is rated for the duty it actually sees.

Key points
At a glance
Overload protection
Both protect against sustained overcurrent via thermal tripping.
Short-circuit protection
Magnetic tripping clears faults; the kA rating must suit the fault level.
Adjustability
Many MCCBs offer adjustable trip; MCBs are fixed-characteristic.
Mounting
MCBs clip to DIN rail; MCCBs are panel- or chassis-mounted.
Discrimination
Correct ratings let downstream devices trip before upstream ones.
Standards
Specify to IEC 60898 (MCB) and IEC 60947-2 (MCCB).
Avoid these
Common mistakes to avoid
The most common error is selecting on rated current alone and ignoring breaking capacity, leaving a breaker that cannot safely clear the fault at its location. The second is using an MCB where fault levels demand an MCCB to save a few dirhams — a false economy that risks the whole board.
Others include forgetting discrimination (so an upstream device trips before the faulty circuit), mixing standards, and not documenting trip settings on adjustable MCCBs. A few minutes confirming the fault level and the coordination prevents all of them.

How we help
From this guide to delivered product
Reading the theory is one thing; applying it to your project is another. The Emirates Panel technical team turns this guidance into a specific recommendation — the right device, rating and accessories for your duty — and supplies it as genuine, authorized product with the documentation your consultant needs to approve it.
Send your requirement, a one-line or a parts list, and we respond with pricing, availability and lead time, backed by EP Group sourcing across the UAE and GCC.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Is an MCCB always better than an MCB?
No — they serve different duties. An MCCB is overkill (and costly) on a lighting circuit; an MCB is unsafe on a high-fault-level feeder. Use each where it belongs.
What breaking capacity do I need?
Enough to exceed the prospective fault current at that point — estimate it from the transformer impedance using our fault-current calculator, then add margin.
Can I use an MCB at 125 A?
Some MCB ranges reach 125 A, but at higher fault levels an MCCB with the right kA rating is usually the safer, more flexible choice.
Which brands do you supply?
We supply MCBs and MCCBs from ABB, Lovato and Alfanar as an authorized distributor — genuine and warranted.
Need help specifying?
Our technical team helps you select the right product and supplies it genuine, with documentation.
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