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Morocco Residual Current Circuit Breaker (RCCB) - Market Share Analysis, Industry Trends & Statistics, Growth Forecasts (2026-2031)

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    Report

  • 90 Pages
  • June 2026
  • Region: Morocco
  • Mordor Intelligence
  • ID: 6253857
The morocco residual current circuit breaker market size is expected to grow from USD 8.22 million in 2025 to USD 8.72 million in 2026 and is forecast to reach USD 12.86 million by 2031 at 8.08% CAGR over 2026-2031. This report is Segmented by Product Type (AC Type RCCB, A Type RCCB, F Type RCCB, and B Type RCCB), Pole Configuration (Two-Pole RCCB, Four-Pole RCCB), Rated Current (Up To 25A, 25A To 63A, and Above 63A), and End User (Residential, Commercial, Industrial, and Utilities and Infrastructure). The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).

Morocco Residual Current Circuit Breaker (RCCB) Market Trends and Insights

Mandatory 30 mA Differential Protection In Low-Voltage Installations

Mandatory residual-current protection remains one of the clearest supports for unit demand in the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market. Safety compliance at the consumer panel level keeps RCCB adoption tied to the basic structure of low-voltage installations rather than to discretionary spending alone. This matters because each new hookup, each panel replacement, and each compliance-driven refurbishment creates a repeat need for certified protection at the board level. The Morocco residual current circuit breaker market, therefore, draws support from both new urban construction and the gradual formalization of older installations that need better leakage protection. The effect is broader than a single end-use category, because the same compliance logic applies across households, small shops, and service buildings. That broad regulatory base also gives established brands a clearer path to volume stability when enforcement is applied through formal connection and inspection channels.

Construction And Infrastructure Buildout Ahead Of Major Public Projects

Large public project activity is raising commercial and institutional demand across the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market. Stadiums, airports, hotels, transport links, and supporting urban works all require multi-circuit low-voltage panels with higher device density than typical residential boards. This project mix is especially important because it lifts demand for four-pole products, higher current ratings, and certified devices that can pass formal engineering review. The Morocco residual current circuit breaker market also gains from the timing profile of these projects, since procurement begins during fit-out phases and continues through commissioning and post-handover maintenance. Hospitality and transit assets add another layer of demand because kitchens, laundry systems, HVAC equipment, and back-of-house services depend on reliable protection across electronically controlled circuits. As a result, construction-led demand is not only expanding volumes, but it is also improving the sales mix toward products with better pricing and specification discipline.

Price Sensitivity And Informal Low-Cost Imports

Price pressure remains one of the clearest restraints on value expansion in the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market. Entry-level residential demand is highly sensitive to upfront device cost, which creates room for low-cost imports to compete even when their compliance quality is uncertain. That weakens pricing power for established brands in the highest-volume channels and slows migration toward higher-grade specifications. The Morocco residual current circuit breaker market is especially exposed in self-build and small-contractor purchases, where buying decisions can still be driven by shelf price rather than lifecycle safety performance. This pressure does not eliminate demand, but it does cap the pace at which average selling prices can rise across the broader market. It also forces leading suppliers to balance certification, channel support, and affordability more carefully than in project-led commercial demand.

Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
  • Industrial Expansion In Automotive And Export Manufacturing Clusters
  • Rooftop Solar Self-Consumption Rollout In Industrial And Tertiary Sites
  • Installer Preference For Basic Protection Architectures

Segment Analysis

AC Type RCCB held 46.8% of the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market size in 2025, and it remained the largest product category because single-phase residential boards still form the broadest installed base. Its leadership reflected low unit cost, basic familiarity among installers, and the continued presence of price-sensitive demand in peri-urban and rural channels. The category also benefited from the fact that many households and small shops still run circuits with simple appliance mixes that do not immediately force a switch to higher-specification protection. Even so, the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market is moving away from a pure AC-type baseline as electronics become more common in daily loads. Type A, therefore, continued to gain ground in urban housing and commercial settings where appliances, lighting controls, and compact power electronics are more common. This shift matters because even modest migration from AC Type to Type A improves the value mix of the Morocco residual current circuit breaker industry without requiring a dramatic jump in unit volumes.

The faster part of the product story sits in higher-sensitivity applications. B Type RCCB is forecast to grow at 8.9% CAGR through 2031, making it the fastest-growing product segment in the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market as solar and EV-linked use cases expand. This segment addresses applications where smooth DC leakage can impair the performance of lower-type devices, which gives it a clear technical role in modern electrical architecture. F Type RCCB also occupies a meaningful niche, especially where variable-speed drives, inverter compressors, and mixed-frequency loads appear in HVAC and industrial circuits. IEC 61008-1 fourth edition took effect on November 21, 2024 and added temporary overvoltage resistance testing while strengthening the compliance baseline for RCCBs used in household and similar applications. That change supports the ongoing mix shift in the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market because device selection is now more closely tied to actual load characteristics rather than to a lowest-cost default. Over time, the product ladder should become more segmented, with AC Type retaining scale, Type A widening across general electronics-heavy circuits, and Types F and B taking a larger share of premium applications.

Two-Pole RCCBs accounted for 63.5% of the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market share in 2025, which reflected the dominance of single-phase residential wiring across the country. The configuration remained the volume leader because most household boards and many small-business installations still rely on phase and neutral protection in compact panel formats. This makes two-pole devices central to base demand, especially in lower-ticket projects where installation simplicity and replacement compatibility matter. The Morocco residual current circuit breaker market also keeps this segment active because housing additions and ordinary refurbishments occur across a much wider footprint than large commercial builds. Within that installed base, the configuration is not static, because more boards now include electronics-heavy circuits that can gradually pull Type A, Type F, or even Type B specifications into the two-pole range.

Four-Pole RCCB is projected to grow at 8.6% CAGR through 2031, making it the fastest-growing pole configuration in the Morocco residual current circuit breaker market. Its momentum comes from hotels, airports, stadiums, factories, data facilities, and other three-phase environments where protection must cover more complex panel arrangements. This segment benefits from the same commercial and infrastructure pipeline that is lifting demand for higher current ratings and better-certified device families. As a result, the volume gap with two-pole products will remain wide, but the value contribution of four-pole units will continue to rise. That pattern matters to the Morocco residual current circuit breaker industry because project-driven demand usually favors engineering review, documented compliance, and stronger service support. It also helps large brands, since multi-pole project orders are less exposed to informal low-cost imports than residential shelf sales. The pole configuration mix, therefore, shows a market that still depends on household scale, but is increasingly shaped by professional commercial procurement.

Complete Report Scope:

  • By Product Type
    • AC Type RCCB
    • A Type RCCB
    • F Type RCCB
    • B Type RCCB
  • By Pole Configuration
    • Two-Pole RCCB
    • Four-Pole RCCB
  • By Rated Current
    • Up to 25A
    • 25A to 63A
    • Above 63A
  • By End User
    • Residential
    • Commercial
    • Industrial
    • Utilities and Infrastructure

List of Companies Covered in this Report:

  • Schneider Electric
  • ABB Ltd
  • Legrand
  • Hager Group
  • Eaton Corporation
  • Siemens AG
  • CHINT Group
  • Ingelec
  • Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
  • Fuji Electric Co., Ltd.
  • Socomec
  • ETI Elektroelement
  • LOVATO Electric
  • Havells India Ltd.
  • HD Hyundai Electric
  • NOARK Electric
  • LS ELECTRIC
  • Larsen & Toubro
  • Delixi Electric
  • Doepke

Additional Benefits:

  • The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
  • 3 months of analyst support

Table of Contents

1 Introduction
1.1 Study Assumptions & Market Definition
1.2 Scope of the Study
2 Research Methodology3 Executive Summary
4 Market Landscape
4.1 Market Overview
4.2 Market Drivers
4.2.1 Mandatory 30 mA differential protection in low-voltage installations
4.2.2 Construction and infrastructure buildout ahead of major public projects
4.2.3 Industrial expansion in automotive and export manufacturing clusters
4.2.4 Rooftop solar self-consumption rollout in industrial and tertiary sites
4.2.5 Data-center and digital infrastructure loads raising protection intensity
4.2.6 Shift from Type AC toward Type A and Type F in electronics-heavy circuits
4.3 Market Restraints
4.3.1 Price sensitivity and informal low-cost imports
4.3.2 Installer preference for basic protection architectures
4.3.3 Nuisance-tripping concerns in hot, dusty, and variable-quality installations
4.3.4 Slow low-voltage residential solar rule implementation
4.4 Supply-Chain Analysis
4.5 Regulatory Landscape
4.6 Technological Outlook
4.7 Porter's Five Forces
4.7.1 Bargaining Power of Suppliers
4.7.2 Bargaining Power of Buyers
4.7.3 Threat of New Entrants
4.7.4 Threat of Substitutes
4.7.5 Intensity of Rivalry
4.8 Investment Analysis
5 Market Size & Growth Forecasts
5.1 By Product Type
5.1.1 AC Type RCCB
5.1.2 A Type RCCB
5.1.3 F Type RCCB
5.1.4 B Type RCCB
5.2 By Pole Configuration
5.2.1 Two-Pole RCCB
5.2.2 Four-Pole RCCB
5.3 By Rated Current
5.3.1 Up to 25A
5.3.2 25A to 63A
5.3.3 Above 63A
5.4 By End User
5.4.1 Residential
5.4.2 Commercial
5.4.3 Industrial
5.4.4 Utilities and Infrastructure
6 Competitive Landscape
6.1 Market Concentration
6.2 Strategic Moves
6.3 Market Share/Ranking Analysis
6.4 Company Profiles {(includes Global level Overview, Market level overview, Core Segments, Financials as available, Strategic Information, Products & Services, and Recent Developments)}
6.4.1 Schneider Electric
6.4.2 ABB Ltd
6.4.3 Legrand
6.4.4 Hager Group
6.4.5 Eaton Corporation
6.4.6 Siemens AG
6.4.7 CHINT Group
6.4.8 Ingelec
6.4.9 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
6.4.10 Fuji Electric Co., Ltd.
6.4.11 Socomec
6.4.12 ETI Elektroelement
6.4.13 LOVATO Electric
6.4.14 Havells India Ltd.
6.4.15 HD Hyundai Electric
6.4.16 NOARK Electric
6.4.17 LS ELECTRIC
6.4.18 Larsen & Toubro
6.4.19 Delixi Electric
6.4.20 Doepke
7 Market Opportunities & Future Outlook
7.1 White-space & unmet-need assessment

Companies Mentioned (Partial List)

A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:

  • Schneider Electric
  • ABB Ltd
  • Legrand
  • Hager Group
  • Eaton Corporation
  • Siemens AG
  • CHINT Group
  • Ingelec
  • Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
  • Fuji Electric Co., Ltd.
  • Socomec
  • ETI Elektroelement
  • LOVATO Electric
  • Havells India Ltd.
  • HD Hyundai Electric
  • NOARK Electric
  • LS ELECTRIC
  • Larsen & Toubro
  • Delixi Electric
  • Doepke