U.S. code adoption
Tennessee — energy & appliance code adoption
Yes — effectively. This page summarizes electrical (NEC), appliance-listing (UL 858), fire-code, and energy-storage (UL 9540 / NFPA 855) code adoption for Tennessee, with primary sources.
Is UL 858 required in Tennessee?
Yes — effectively. Tennessee requires fixed household appliances to be listed by a Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory (NRTL), and UL 858 is the de-facto listing standard a household electric range must meet.
Are NRTL-listed (UL / ETL / CSA) appliances required in Tennessee?
Yes. Tennessee's adopted code requires fixed electrical appliances to be listed by an NRTL (UL, ETL/Intertek, CSA, etc.) — NEC 110.3.
Which edition of the NEC does Tennessee use?
Tennessee has adopted the 2017 edition of the National Electrical Code (NEC), effective 2018-10-01. TN adopts NEC 2017 as the statewide minimum; local jurisdictions (Nashville, Memphis/Shelby County) may adopt newer editions with amendments.
Is UL 9540 required for residential energy storage in Tennessee?
Yes — effectively. Tennessee requires NRTL listing for stationary energy storage systems (ESS) in dwellings, and UL 9540 is the controlling standard. ESS in residential dwellings governed by IFC §1207, referencing UL 9540 listing and NFPA 855 installation standard. UL 9540A required to exceed the default 20 kWh / dwelling cap or reduce default 3-ft separation.
Is UL 9540A fire-propagation testing required in Tennessee?
Yes — effectively. Tennessee requires NRTL listing for energy storage systems, and UL 9540A is the controlling standard.
What is the residential energy-storage capacity limit in Tennessee?
Tennessee limits residential energy storage to 20 kWh per dwelling unit.
Which fire code does Tennessee enforce?
Tennessee enforces IFC 2021. State Fire Marshal adopted 2021 I-Codes effective Aug 17, 2025.
Code adoption summary
| NEC edition | 2017 NEC |
|---|---|
| Appliance listing (UL 858) | Effectively required |
| NRTL listing requirement | Required |
| Fire code | IFC 2021 |
| IRC edition | 2018 IRC |
| UL 9540 (residential ESS) | Effectively required |
| UL 9540A propagation test | Effectively required |
| Residential ESS cap | 20 kWh / dwelling |
| NFPA 855 edition | 2020 |
Sources