Publication of UL 508A

Last edit: 12/06/2026

First Edition of UL 508A

The first edition of UL 508A, Standard for Industrial Control Panels, was officially published on April 25, 2001. This marked the transition from the Outline of Investigation into a fully recognized UL standard.

The publication of the first edition represented the formal establishment of industrial control panels as a distinct product category with its own dedicated standard.

The standard consolidated years of engineering practice, field evaluation experience, and construction requirements into a single comprehensive document.

The first edition addressed topics such as:

  • Component acceptability
  • Enclosure construction
  • Wiring methods
  • Grounding and bonding
  • Short-circuit protection
  • Marking requirements
  • Conductor sizing
  • Spacing requirements
  • Industrial machinery applications
  • Environmental considerations
  • Field wiring terminals

UL 508A rapidly became the principal construction standard for industrial control panels throughout the United States.

Subsequent Editions and Revisions

The standard continued to evolve as industrial technology, electrical codes, and safety expectations changed.

Key publication milestones include:

Edition Publication Date Notes
1st Edition April 25, 2001 First published UL 508A standard
2nd Edition December 20, 2013 Major restructuring and modernization
3rd Edition April 24, 2018 Significant revisions and harmonization updates

The 3rd Edition introduced numerous revisions related to modern industrial control panel construction practices, including updated requirements associated with short-circuit current ratings (SCCR), component coordination, and construction methods.

UL has continued issuing revisions and updates to the standard since publication of the 3rd Edition. Revisions were issued on:

  • July 3, 2018
  • April 16, 2020
  • August 6, 2020
  • July 13, 2021
  • August 5, 2021
  • July 21, 2022
  • July 28, 2022
  • June 26, 2025

These revisions addressed evolving industry practices and code alignment requirements.