Rapid Test & Tag
CompliancePublished 5 July 2026

Does New Equipment Need Test and Tag? The 'Out of the Box' Rule Explained

New electrical equipment does not need to be electrically tested before its first use — under AS/NZS 3760, new items are considered safe out of the box. However, best practice is to record and tag new equipment as 'new to service' with the date it enters use, so its retest cycle starts on the right footing.

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Rapid Test & Tag

Sydney's on-site safety compliance team b7 3 min read

So while a brand-new appliance doesn't need testing, it shouldn't simply be ignored. Here's why — and what you should do instead.

Why new equipment is exempt from testing

A new appliance from a reputable supplier has been manufactured to electrical safety requirements and hasn't yet been exposed to the wear, damage, or environmental stress that testing is designed to catch. Running full electrical tests on an item straight out of its packaging adds cost without adding safety information you don't already have.

For that reason, new equipment is treated as safe for first use under AS/NZS 3760.

What you should still do

The key is not to lose track of the item. Good practice is to fit a tag (often marked “new to service” or similar) showing the date the equipment entered use. That date sets the clock for its first proper retest, based on the interval appropriate to your workplace — for example, 12 months in a typical office or six months in a workshop or kitchen.

Without that starting date, it's easy for a new item to quietly fall outside your testing system and be missed for years.

In practice: When you bring new equipment into your workplace, log it, tag it with its in-service date, and set its first retest based on your environment. A provider can fold new items into your existing schedule during a regular visit, so your asset register stays complete and nothing slips through.

Where confusion creeps in

Two myths are worth clearing up:

“New gear must be tested before we can use it.”

Not so — it's the visual and record step that matters at first use, not electrical testing.

“New gear never needs testing.”

Also wrong — the exemption only applies to first use. Once it's in service, it joins the normal retest cycle like everything else.

The simple approach

When you bring new equipment into your workplace, log it, tag it with its in-service date, and set its first retest based on your environment. A provider can fold new items into your existing schedule during a regular visit, so your asset register stays complete and nothing slips through.

If you've recently added equipment and aren't sure it's been entered into your testing system, a quick review will bring your records up to date.

Recently added new equipment?

We can fold new items into your existing test and tag schedule during your next service visit — so your asset register stays complete. Same-day certificates. Automatic reminders.

Note: This article is general information. Confirm your specific compliance requirements with a qualified professional.

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