If you have more than one outlet in your bathroom and only one is GFCI, they are likely already wired downstream of the protected outlet and will be protected.
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Beartotem@sh.itjust.works 8 months agoThe electrical code require using GFCI outlet for outlets within a certain distance of water source. I don’t remember precisely the distance (and it likely vary a bit by jurisdiciton), but i know that in my bathroom, there’s nowhere beyond it.
In order to use that sort of outlet in a bathroom like mine, it would have to have GFCI protection as well as USB, be a second outlet wired to the GFCI protected terminal of a GFCI outlet, or be wired to a circuit breaker with GFCI protection built in, in the electrical panel.
Jyek@lemmynsfw.com 8 months ago
ghterve@lemmy.world 8 months ago
In all my cases where I installed those, the GFCI protection is upstream in another outlet somewhere or at the breaker. You don’t need actual GFCI outlets at each location. One GFCI outlet can protect a whole circuit.