One of the most fundamental decisions in commercial and industrial electrical planning is whether your facility requires a low voltage (LV) or medium voltage (MV) power distribution system. Getting this wrong means either paying for overcapacity you do not need or installing a system that simply cannot support your operational demands. Professional electrical engineering services are essential to making this determination correctly from the outset.
Defining Low Voltage and Medium Voltage
| System Type | Voltage Range | Common Applications | Typical Supply Method |
| Extra Low Voltage (ELV) | Up to 50V AC / 120V DC | Control circuits, telecoms, safety systems | Transformer or battery |
| Low Voltage (LV) | 50V–1000V AC | Offices, retail, light industrial | DNO supply direct |
| Medium Voltage (MV) | 1kV–36kV | Heavy industrial, large commercial, campuses | Private HV substation |
| High Voltage (HV) | 36kV–150kV | Grid transmission | National Grid |
Low Voltage Systems: When They Are Appropriate
Low voltage systems (operating between 230V single-phase and 400V three-phase in the UK) are suitable for the vast majority of commercial applications. These include:
- Office buildings up to approximately 2MVA total demand
- Retail units and shopping centres with standard power requirements
- Small to medium manufacturing facilities
- Educational institutions
- Hotels and hospitality venues
- Healthcare clinics and GP surgeries
Advantages of LV Systems
- Lower installation cost compared to MV infrastructure
- Wider availability of qualified electricians and engineers
- Standard equipment readily available from multiple suppliers
- Simpler maintenance and fault-finding procedures
- Direct supply available from Distribution Network Operator (DNO)
Limitations of LV Systems
- Voltage drop limits cable runs to practical distances
- High fault current levels require careful protection coordination
- Not suitable for loads above approximately 1.5–2MW without MV upgrade
Medium Voltage Systems: When They Are Necessary
Medium voltage systems become necessary when electrical demand exceeds what a standard LV supply can economically or safely deliver. MV systems are essential for:
- Large manufacturing plants with heavy machinery (motors >200kW)
- Data centres with significant UPS and cooling loads
- University campuses and large hospital complexes
- Large distribution warehouses and logistics centres
- Multi-building commercial or industrial estates
- Processing plants including food, chemical, and oil and gas
| Decision Factor | LV System Appropriate | MV System Required |
| Total electrical demand | Below 1.5MVA | Above 1.5–2MVA |
| Largest single motor load | Below 200kW | 200kW and above |
| Site area | Compact, single building | Multiple buildings or large site |
| Future expansion plans | Limited growth anticipated | Significant load growth planned |
| Utility supply availability | Standard LV connection available | LV supply insufficient or costly |
Cost Comparison: LV vs MV
| Cost Element | LV System | MV System |
| Initial installation | Lower (no substation required) | Higher (HV substation + transformers) |
| Cable costs for long runs | Higher (larger conductors needed) | Lower (smaller conductors at higher voltage) |
| Protection equipment | Standard MCBs, RCDs, ACBs | Specialist MV switchgear and relays |
| Maintenance complexity | Standard — wide skills pool | Specialist — authorised HV engineers required |
| Energy losses on distribution | Higher for long distances | Lower — reduced current, reduced I²R losses |
| 10-year total cost (large site) | Can exceed MV cost | More economical over lifetime for large sites |
Hybrid LV/MV Systems
Many large commercial and industrial sites operate hybrid systems: MV supply to one or more on-site substations, which then distribute LV power to individual buildings or process areas. This approach offers the transmission efficiency of MV with the practical simplicity of LV distribution at point of use.
The Role of a Load Flow Study
Before specifying LV or MV, your electrical engineering consultant will conduct a load flow study — a computer-modelled analysis of your facility’s electrical demand under various operating conditions. This study determines:
- Peak demand and diversity of load
- Voltage profile at key points in the system
- Cable and equipment ratings required
- Future capacity requirements for planned expansion
- Whether the DNO can supply your demand on LV terms
Why Almens Consult Makes the Right System Choice for You
Selecting between LV and MV is a decision that has lasting financial and operational consequences. At Almens Consult, their engineers bring the analytical rigour of full load flow studies, lifecycle cost assessments, and compliance expertise to every system selection decision. They work with businesses across sectors to design power distribution solutions that are precisely sized for current needs while being engineered for future growth. When you choose Almens Consult, you get a system designed to perform, built to last, and fully compliant with all applicable standards.
Conclusion
The choice between low voltage and medium voltage systems is driven by your facility’s total electrical demand, physical scale, load profile, and future plans. Neither system is universally better — the right choice depends entirely on your specific requirements. Engage a qualified electrical engineering consultant early in your project planning to ensure the most technically sound and commercially viable decision is made.