Hipot Testing Explained: Tests, Standards & Equipment

Hipot testing proves that a product's insulation can withstand a voltage well above its normal operating level, a fundamental electrical-safety check before a product reaches the market. This guide explains hipot and the related safety tests, how to choose a tester and the equipment APC supplies to perform them.

What is hipot testing?

Hipot (high potential) also written (hi-pot), dielectric withstand and dielectric voltage withstand all name the same test. It applies a voltage above a product's normal operating level between its live parts and its accessible or earthed parts and measures the resulting leakage current. If the insulation breaks down or arcs over, the product fails.

The test proves that the insulation can withstand transient overvoltages safely. It also catches manufacturing faults that weaken insulation, such as pinholes, scrapes, inadequate spacing, crimps, trapped moisture and contamination. Hipot testing is used across finished-product safety, cable and wiring-harness testing and transformer and wound-component testing.

The four electrical safety tests

Hipot is one of four tests that together verify electrical safety. A combined safety analyser performs all of them in sequence.

Dielectric withstand (hipot)

Applies a high voltage (AC or DC) above the operating level and detects insulation breakdown or flashover through the leakage current. A pass/fail withstand test.

hipot testing diagramhipot testing diagram

Insulation resistance (IR)

Applies a DC voltage (typically 50 - 1000 V) and measures the insulation resistance in megohms. It is non-destructive and standards often set a minimum such as 10 MΩ. Some procedures run IR, then hipot, then IR again to confirm the hipot did not degrade the insulation.

Insulation resistance testing and DC withstand testingInsulation resistance testing and DC withstand testing

Leakage current

Measures the current that would flow through a person using a network that simulates body impedance, while the equipment runs. It checks touch and earth leakage stay within safe limits.

Ground bond/continuity

Verifies the protective-earth path. A ground continuity test passes about 1 A and checks the resistance is below 1 Ω, a ground bond test passes 25 A or 1.5 x the rated current and checks the resistance is typically below 100 mΩ.

Ground Protection TestingGround Protection Testing

ARC Test

ARC is a type of electrical discharge that occurs when the insulation capability is insufficient. If ARC occurs multiple times, the system will fail. ARC may occur within 10us; thus, the resolution and sensitivity of ARC judgement will influence the test result.

Hipot vs insulation resistance (megger test vs hipot)

A "megger" is an insulation-resistance tester: it applies a DC voltage and reads the insulation resistance in megohms or gigohms. It is a non-destructive measurement. Meggers test low to medium voltage with a typical voltage between 600V and 2000V. 

A hipot applies a much higher stress voltage and looks for breakdown through the leakage current. It is a withstand test with a pass/fail result. Hipot testing applies significantly higher voltages, typically above 15,000V.

Both answer different questions. Insulation resistance asks "how good is the insulation?" whilst hipot asks "will the insulation survive a defined over-voltage?". Both are useful and many standards call for both.

AC vs DC hipot

Where a standard permits a DC test, the hipot test formula sets the DC voltage to the peak of the AC value:

DC test voltage = AC (RMS) × 1.414

Always check the relevant standard before substituting DC for AC.

AC Advantages: stresses both polarities; no voltage ramp needed; widely accepted by safety agencies; no need to discharge the DUT afterwards.

AC Disadvantages: measures total (capacitive plus resistive) leakage; needs a larger, costlier transformer.

DC Advantages: measures resistive leakage only, giving a true value; no reactive current,so fewer false failures; lower current, lower cost and lower operator risk; easier on capacitive products.

DC Disadvantages: needs a ramp-up and a discharge afterwards; stresses one polarity only; not accepted by every standard.

How to choose a hipot tester

  • Voltage capability - as a rule of thumb, choose a tester that supplies at least 2 ×working voltage + 1000 V
  • Output - AC, DC or both, depending on your standard
  • Tests needed - hipot only, or hipot plus insulation resistance, leakage current, and ground bond in one combined safety analyser
  • Automation - manual, semi-automatic or fully automatic test sequencing
  • Production - for high volumes, multi-channel testers handle many devices at once, and features such as simultaneous hipot and ground bond, plus open/short check (OSC), cut test time

Which equipment for which test

Test /requirement

What it checks

Equipment type

Dielectric withstanding (hipot)

Insulation breakdown under high voltage (AC or DC)

Hipot tester

Insulation resistance (IR)

Insulation resistance in MΩ (DC)

Hipot tester with IR, or insulation tester

Leakage current

Current through a body-simulating network

Leakage current tester / safety analyser

Ground bond /continuity

Protective-earth integrity

Ground bond tester

All-in-one bench /production

Runs the full sequence in one unit

Electrical safety analyser (5-in-1)

High-volumeproduction

Many devices /channels at once

Multi-channelhipot tester

Higher-power /HV bench hipot

Bench dielectric withstand up to 10kVAC

Hipot analyser

Wound components/transformers

Hipot + IR forwindings

Wound-component safety analyser

Hipot test voltages & standards

Tested products fall into two classes. Class 1 equipment has a protective earth, live, neutral and earth. Class 2 equipment is double-insulated, with live and neutral only.

Typical hipot test voltages depend on the product's standard:

  • 3 kVAC for IT and industrial equipment (IEC/EN 62368-1) and for measurement, control and laboratory equipment (IEC/EN 61010-1)
  • 4 kVAC for medical electrical equipment (IEC/EN 60601-1), which also demands greater creepage and clearance

Standard

Applies to

IEC/EN 62368-1

Audio/video, IT and communication equipment (replaces IEC/EN 60950-1 andEN 60065)

IEC/EN 61010-1

Measurement, control and laboratory equipment

IEC/EN 60601-1

Medical electrical equipment

IEC/EN 60335-1

Household and similar appliances

IEC/EN 60204-1

Electrical equipment of machines

IEC/EN 61558

Transformers and power supplies

 

If you still test to IEC 60950-1, note it was withdrawn in favour of IEC/EN 62368-1. Check which standard your certification now requires. Always confirm the test voltage, method and duration against the specific standard for your product.

Acceptable leakage current and pass/fail limits

A hipot test passes or fails on leakage current. You set a maximum allowable leakage, the trip threshold and the tester fails any device that exceeds it or that arcs. The acceptable leakage current is defined by the product's safety standard, not the tester, and varies with the equipment class and application. AC tests draw more current because they include the capacitive component; DC tests measure the resistive leakage only, so the limit is usually lower.

As a guide, production hipot limits often sit in the low milliamp range (commonly around 0.5 - 10 mA), but you must take the exact figure and dwell time from the standard you certify to. Set the limit too high and a real fault passes; set it too low and good units fail on capacitive charging current.

How long is a hipot test, and is it destructive?

Test time ranges from about 10 milliseconds to 5 minutes, depending on the standard. One minute is common for type testing. Production-line tests are shorter, often one to two seconds at a slightly raised voltage to verify build consistency without stressing the unit.

A hipot test can be destructive if the voltage or duration exceeds what the design tolerates and insulation damage is hard to detect. Do not apply a voltage above the product's rating and avoid repeat testing at full voltage, use a reduced voltage for retests. One way to set a safe production voltage is to test samples to failure, then test production units at a lower voltage with an adequate safety margin.


Get expert advice on Hipot testing

Whether you're selecting a new Hipot tester, upgrading your existing test capability or looking to improve electrical safety and compliance, APC can help. 

Talk to our technical team today to discuss your requirements, arrange a product demonstration or get support choosing the right Hipot solution for your application.

APC's engineers can provide technical advice, ongoing support, and hands-on product demos to help you make the right decision with confidence.