| AIS (air-insulated switchgear) | GIS (gas-insulated switchgear) |
| It has a metal-clad system that employs air insulation. | It uses the gas sulfur hexafluoride for insulation. Sulfur hexafluoride is much heavier than air and offers great extinction behavior. |
| Three-position draw-out circuit breakers are used in the metal-clad AIS. | GIS systems use fixed-mounted circuit breakers. |
| More economical for low/medium voltage systems. | It is expensive as compared to AIS. |
| More maintenance cost over a lifetime | Less maintenance cost |
| The AIS breaker is removable for maintenance & troubleshoot | The breakers here are ‘sealed-for-life.’ |
| AIS systems cover more space | GIS systems cover less space |
| More installation time | Less installation time |
| Visual inspections of AIS systems should be done every year to every two years. | GIS switchyards require significantly less maintenance |