Cable Accessories Price Comparison
Compare 182 cable accessories from Cablenet, Rittal, Digitus and more — find the best price on ducts, clips, grommets and cable management solutions.
Cable Accessories price comparison UK
Cable accessories are the unsung heroes of any tidy, safe installation — and yet they're where most people cut corners. Whether you're routing ethernet behind a desk, managing a server rack, or running conduit through a commercial fit-out, the quality of your cable management hardware makes a real difference to both safety and long-term maintenance. We've tracked 182 products across this category, and the range is striking: prices run from 11 £ for basic clips and grommets up to 11 £ for heavy-duty industrial cable protection systems.
Cablenet dominates the catalogue with 37 references averaging around 11 £, making it the go-to for everyday cable duct and trunking needs. Rittal sits at the other end of the spectrum — 22 products with a noticeably higher average price, reflecting their focus on rack-mount and industrial enclosure accessories. Digitus and LogiLink fill the middle ground well, offering solid flame-retardant ducts, snap-fit connectors and RJ45 strain relief boots that suit both home office and light commercial use. What's worth noting is that networking cable installations almost always require companion accessories — kink protection boots, cable ducts and grommets are rarely optional once you're running structured cabling properly.
The Defender range stands out as a specialist outlier: nine products averaging £150, all focused on heavy-duty cable protector ramps designed for floors and public spaces. These are a completely different product family from standard cable management — more akin to safety equipment than IT accessories. If you're comparing prices on those, don't conflate them with the budget duct and clip market. Similarly, DeLOCK's ten products average over £100, reflecting their premium panel-mount and industrial-grade connector accessories.
For most buyers, the sweet spot sits between 11 £ and 11 £: this is where you'll find decent-quality PVC cable ducts with self-adhesive backing, snap-fit modular systems, and spiral wrap solutions that actually stay put. Spending less than 11 £ is fine for a single cable clip, but don't expect UV resistance or any meaningful flame retardancy rating. If your installation is in a commercial building or industrial environment, CE marking and UL94 V-0 flame retardancy aren't optional — they're a baseline requirement. Compare prices carefully on wire connectors and power cables alongside your accessories to avoid paying over the odds by sourcing each component separately.
How to Choose the Right Cable Accessories
Most people buy cable accessories as an afterthought — and then regret it when the duct splits, the adhesive fails, or the installation fails a fire safety inspection. The market spans everything from £2 grommets to £300 floor cable protectors, so knowing which specs actually matter for your use case saves both money and frustration.
Cable duct width and internal diameter
This is the first spec to check — and the one most often ignored until it's too late. A duct that's too narrow forces cables into tight bends, risks kinking, and makes future additions impossible. Standard internal diameters run from 12mm (suitable for 2–4 thin cables) up to 50mm for multi-cable runs. Our advice: size up by at least one step from what you think you need. A 25mm duct filled to 60% capacity is far easier to maintain than a 16mm duct stuffed to the brim. If you're routing alongside networking cables, remember that Cat6A cables are noticeably bulkier than Cat5e.
Material and flame retardancy rating
PVC is the default material and perfectly adequate for most indoor, office-environment installations. However, if the installation is in a commercial building, a school, or any space subject to building regulations, you need to verify the flame retardancy rating. UL94 V-0 is the gold standard — it self-extinguishes within 10 seconds and doesn't drip burning material. V-2 rated products are cheaper but allow flaming drips, which is unacceptable in most commercial contexts. For outdoor or industrial use, polypropylene (PP) or neoprene materials offer far better UV and chemical resistance than standard PVC, which becomes brittle and cracks over time when exposed to sunlight.
Installation method: adhesive vs. mechanical fixing
Self-adhesive backing is convenient but has real limitations — it works well on smooth, clean surfaces at room temperature, but fails on textured walls, in damp environments, or anywhere that gets warm. If you're fitting cable management in a kitchen, server room, or anywhere with temperature swings, screw-mounted clips or snap-fit mechanical connectors are significantly more reliable. The snap-fit modular systems from brands like Digitus and LogiLink are particularly good value: tool-free assembly, repositionable, and they don't leave adhesive residue when you need to reconfigure. Budget an extra 20–30% for mechanical fixing hardware versus adhesive-only options — it's worth it.
UV and chemical resistance for outdoor or industrial use
Standard cable ducts are not rated for outdoor use, full stop. If any part of your cable run is exposed to direct sunlight, rain, or industrial chemicals (oils, solvents, cleaning agents), you need accessories explicitly rated for those conditions. Look for UV-resistant polypropylene or neoprene products with an IP rating of at least IP44 for outdoor use. The price premium is real — expect to pay from 11 £ upwards for properly rated outdoor accessories — but the alternative is replacing degraded, cracked ductwork within 12–18 months.
Cable capacity and weight rating (for floor protectors)
If you're looking at cable protector ramps — the Defender range being the main example in this catalogue — the weight rating is the critical spec, not the aesthetics. A Defender Mini rated for pedestrian traffic only is completely unsuitable for a forklift route, regardless of price. Weight ratings range from 5kg (light pedestrian) to 50kg+ (vehicle-rated). The Defender Ultra L at the top of the range handles heavy vehicle traffic; the Defender Nano is pedestrian-only. Don't buy down on this spec — the liability implications of an under-rated floor cable protector are significant.
- Basic clips and grommets (From 11 £ to 11 £) : Entry-level cable clips, grommets, kink protection boots and short cable duct sections. Brands like Cimco, Goobay and Lanberg dominate here. Perfectly adequate for home use or light-touch cable tidying, but don't expect flame retardancy ratings or UV resistance. Fine for a home office; not appropriate for commercial installations.
- The practical sweet spot (From 11 £ to 11 £) : Where most sensible buyers land. Cablenet, Digitus and LogiLink offer snap-fit modular ducts, RJ45 strain relief accessories and decent-quality cable management kits in this range. You start to see CE marking and basic flame retardancy here. Good value for small business and structured home cabling projects.
- Professional-grade management (From 11 £ to 11 £) : Rittal, Black Box and Microconnect products feature here — rack-mount accessories, higher-spec cable trays and industrial-grade duct systems. UL94 V-0 flame retardancy and IP-rated enclosures become standard. The right tier for commercial fit-outs, server rooms and any installation subject to building regulations.
- Specialist and heavy-duty (Over 11 £) : Dominated by Defender floor cable protectors and DeLOCK's industrial connector accessories. These aren't premium versions of standard cable ducts — they're specialist products for specific applications (vehicle-rated floor protection, heavy industrial environments). Only buy here if you genuinely need the spec; there's no point paying over 11 £ for a desk cable tidy.
Top products
- Brennenstuhl BN-1164360 (Brennenstuhl) : The most-compared product in this category and for good reason — Brennenstuhl's build quality is reliable and the price sits comfortably in the entry range. A solid default choice for basic cable management needs, though don't expect industrial-grade specs.
- Goobay Cable Duct, black, 2.5m (Goobay) : Good value for a 2.5m continuous duct — fewer joints means fewer potential failure points. The black finish suits most desk and wall installations. Adequate for home and light office use; not rated for commercial fire safety compliance.
- Hama Cable Bundle Tube Easy Cover, 1.5 m, 30 mm, silver Cable kit (Hama) : A neat solution for bundling multiple cables behind a TV or desk. The 30mm diameter handles a reasonable cable count, and the silver finish works well in modern interiors. At 1.5m it's short — fine for a single desk run, not for longer installations.
- Digitus Kink protection boot for RJ45 plugs (Digitus) : A specialist buy, but genuinely useful if you're making up patch leads or managing a busy patch panel. Digitus is a trusted brand for structured cabling accessories. Inexpensive enough to fit as standard on every connector — the cost of not using them is a failed cable at the worst moment.
- Defender Mini (Defender) : The entry point to the Defender floor protector range — pedestrian-rated and more compact than the full Defender 3. Priced at the higher end of this catalogue, so only buy it if you genuinely need floor cable protection. For desk or wall management, it's complete overkill.
Related categories
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between a cable duct and a cable tray?
A cable duct is an enclosed channel — typically with a removable lid — that fully encases cables for protection and a tidy appearance. A cable tray is an open or perforated support structure, usually used in industrial or commercial settings where ventilation and easy access matter more than aesthetics. For most office and home installations, cable ducts are the right choice. Cable trays are better suited to server rooms, data centres and industrial environments where you're routing large numbers of cables and need airflow around them.
Do I really need a flame-retardant cable duct for a home office?
Strictly speaking, no — domestic installations aren't subject to the same building regulations as commercial premises. However, UL94 V-0 or V-1 rated ducts cost only marginally more than non-rated alternatives in the 11 £ to 11 £ range, so there's little reason not to use them. If you're ever renting out the property or converting a room to a business use, non-rated cable management could become a compliance issue. It's a cheap insurance policy.
Will self-adhesive cable clips actually stay stuck?
On smooth, clean, dry surfaces at room temperature — yes, for a reasonable period. On textured walls, painted plaster, or anywhere that gets warm (near radiators, in direct sunlight), self-adhesive backing is unreliable within months. The failure mode is gradual: the adhesive softens, the clip tilts, and eventually the whole run sags. For anything permanent or load-bearing, screw-mounted clips or snap-fit mechanical systems are significantly more dependable. Self-adhesive is fine for temporary cable tidying or lightweight single-cable management.
What are kink protection boots for RJ45 plugs, and do I need them?
Kink protection boots are flexible rubber or PVC sleeves that fit over the cable entry point of an RJ45 plug, preventing the cable from bending sharply at the connector — the most common point of failure in patch cables. If you're making up your own patch leads or replacing damaged connectors, they're worth fitting as standard. The Digitus boots in this catalogue are a good example: inexpensive, available in multiple colours for colour-coding, and they genuinely extend cable life in high-movement environments like patch panels and switch ports.
Are Defender cable protectors worth the price compared to cheaper alternatives?
For pedestrian-only environments, cheaper alternatives can work adequately. But Defender's real value is in their weight ratings and build quality for vehicle-traffic scenarios — and that's where cutting costs is genuinely dangerous. A cheap floor cable protector that fails under a loaded trolley or forklift creates a trip hazard and potential liability. The Defender range is priced at 11 £ to 11 £ for good reason: the materials, hinge mechanisms and load ratings are engineered for repeated heavy use. If you only need pedestrian protection in a temporary setup, a budget option is fine. For anything with wheeled traffic, don't compromise.
What pitfalls should I avoid when buying cable management accessories online?
The biggest trap is buying accessories that don't match your existing system — particularly with modular snap-fit duct systems, where connectors, end caps and joining pieces are often proprietary. Always check that the accessories you're buying are compatible with your existing duct brand before ordering. The second common mistake is underestimating the quantity needed: measure twice, order once, and add 15% for waste and mistakes. Finally, watch out for products listed without any material specification or flame retardancy rating — if the listing doesn't mention UL94 or CE marking, assume it has neither.
