Quote Originally Posted by jadnashua View Post
method is to substitute either the breaker for a GFCI or to find the first box on the run and install a GFCI receptacle there, then daisy-chain the rest on the circuit with the load side from the GFCI.
One thing that is kind of a drag is that GFI's can get confused. If you put in a gfi breaker and all the wire flowing out of it and all the receptacles and switches and what have you are all in good shape, then the breaker could perform. But if that were the case, then you probably did not need the GFI breaker either.

Same for putting a GFI receptacle in the first of ten receptacles: the chances that something anomalous at the fifth receptacle will trip up the breaker is real.

I try to not have more than two receptacles down stream from a GFI. In most kitchens this works fine, two circuits, two GFIs, six places to plug in counter appliances. It takes a big kitchen to need more, and then, I'd just get the customer to pay for a third circuit.