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Worked Example: Conduit Fill Calculation for a Mixed-Cable Conduit per NEC Chapter 9

Step-by-step conduit fill calculation for a mixed-size cable installation in EMT conduit per NEC/NFPA 70:2023. Covers conductor cross-sectional areas from NEC Chapter 9 Table 5, total occupied area, 40% fill limit for more than 2 conductors, and trade size selection from Table 4.

NEC/NFPA 70:202310 min readUpdated March 6, 2026
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Project Description

A three-phase feeder circuit requires routing through an EMT (Electrical Metallic Tubing) conduit. The installation includes three phase conductors and one equipment grounding conductor of different sizes. This worked example determines the minimum conduit trade size by calculating the total cross-sectional area of all conductors and applying the NEC fill limits.

Conduit fill limits exist to prevent cable overheating (by ensuring adequate air space for heat dissipation), facilitate cable pulling (by limiting friction and jamming), and allow for future maintenance. The NEC specifies these limits in Chapter 9, Table 1 based on the number of conductors in the conduit.

Given Data

ParameterValue
CircuitThree-phase feeder, 208Y/120 V
Phase conductors3 × 3/0 AWG THWN-2 copper
Equipment grounding conductor (EGC)1 × 2 AWG THWN-2 copper
Conduit typeEMT (Electrical Metallic Tubing)
Fill limit40% (more than 2 conductors per NEC Chapter 9, Table 1)
NEC editionNEC/NFPA 70:2023
NEC Chapter 9, Table 1 fill limits:
  • 1 conductor: 53% fill
  • 2 conductors: 31% fill
  • 3 or more conductors: 40% fill
Since we have 4 conductors (3 phase + 1 EGC), the 40% limit applies. Note that the EGC counts as a conductor for fill calculations but not for derating purposes per NEC 310.15(E)(1).

Step 1: Determine Conductor Cross-Sectional Areas

From NEC Chapter 9, Table 5 — Dimensions of Insulated Conductors and Fixture Wires, look up the approximate overall area (including insulation) for THWN-2 conductors:

ConductorAWG/kcmilInsulation TypeApproximate Diameter (in)Approximate Area (in²)
Phase conductor3/0 AWGTHWN-20.5730.2578
EGC2 AWGTHWN-20.4240.1416
From NEC Chapter 9, Table 5 for THWN-2:

3/0 AWG THWN-2:
  Approximate diameter = 0.573 in
  Approximate area = 0.2578 in²

2 AWG THWN-2:
  Approximate diameter = 0.424 in
  Approximate area = 0.1416 in²
Note: Table 5 provides the overall area including insulation thickness. This is the correct value for conduit fill calculations — not the bare conductor area. The insulation on THWN-2 is relatively thin (30 mil PVC + 4 mil nylon jacket), but it still significantly increases the effective area compared to bare copper.

Step 2: Calculate Total Occupied Area

Sum the cross-sectional areas of all conductors in the conduit:

Total occupied area = (n1 × A1) + (n2 × A2)  — (Eq. 1)

Where:
  n1 = 3 (number of 3/0 AWG phase conductors)
  A1 = 0.2578 in² (area of each 3/0 AWG THWN-2)
  n2 = 1 (number of 2 AWG EGC)
  A2 = 0.1416 in² (area of 2 AWG THWN-2)

Total occupied area = (3 × 0.2578) + (1 × 0.1416)
Total occupied area = 0.7734 + 0.1416
Total occupied area = 0.9150 in²

Step 3: Calculate Required Internal Area of Conduit

With 4 conductors, the 40% fill limit applies. The required minimum internal area of the conduit is:

Arequired = Total occupied area / Fill limit  — (Eq. 2)

Arequired = 0.9150 / 0.40
Arequired = 2.2875 in²

The conduit must have an internal cross-sectional area of at least 2.2875 in² to comply with the 40% fill limit.

Step 4: Select Conduit Trade Size from NEC Table 4

From NEC Chapter 9, Table 4 — Dimensions and Percent Area of Conduit and Tubing, for EMT:

Trade SizeMetric DesignatorInternal Diameter (in)Total Internal Area (in²)40% Fill Area (in²)
1271.0490.8640.346
1-1/4351.3801.4960.598
1-1/2411.6102.0360.814
2532.0673.3561.342
2-1/2632.7315.8582.343
3783.0687.3922.957
3-1/2913.5489.8873.955
41034.02612.7235.089
Required internal area: 2.2875 in²

Checking EMT trade sizes (40% fill column):
  2"    EMT: 1.342 in² at 40%  → 1.342 < 2.2875  ✗ Too small
  2-1/2" EMT: 2.343 in² at 40%  → 2.343 > 2.2875  ✓ Passes

Selected: 2-1/2" EMT (Metric Designator 63)

Step 5: Verify Actual Fill Percentage

Calculate the actual fill percentage for the selected 2-1/2" EMT conduit:

Fill % = (Total occupied area / Total internal area) × 100  — (Eq. 3)

Fill % = (0.9150 / 5.858) × 100
Fill % = 15.6%

The actual fill of 15.6% is well within the 40% limit. This substantial margin provides good heat dissipation and easy cable pulling.

Note: While 15.6% fill seems very conservative, the 2-1/2" trade size is the minimum that satisfies the mathematical requirement. The 2" EMT with only 1.342 in² at 40% fill would be a clear violation. In practice, the generous fill ratio makes installation easier and leaves room for future circuit additions if needed.

Let us also verify using the jam ratio to confirm cable pulling will not be problematic:

Jam ratio = Conduit ID / Conductor OD

For the largest conductor (3/0 AWG, 0.573" OD):
  Jam ratio = 2.731 / 0.573 = 4.77

Jam ratio interpretation:
  < 2.0: Impossible to install
  2.0 – 2.5: Likely to jam (triangular configuration locks)
  2.5 – 3.0: Difficult pull
  > 3.0: Good pulling conditions

  4.77 > 3.0  ✓ Good pulling conditions

Step 6: Cross-Check with NEC Annex C

For installations where all conductors are the same size, NEC Annex C provides pre-calculated maximum conductor counts per conduit size. Since our installation has mixed sizes, we cannot use Annex C directly, but we can cross-check our phase conductors against it.

From NEC Annex C, Table C.1 (EMT):
  Maximum 3/0 AWG THWN-2 in 2-1/2" EMT: 6 conductors

We have only 3 conductors of 3/0 AWG (plus 1 smaller EGC).
  3 + 1 (smaller) < 6  ✓ Consistent with our calculation

For a 2" EMT, Annex C shows maximum 3 conductors of 3/0 AWG THWN-2.
Since we also have the 2 AWG EGC, the 2" EMT would be marginal.
This confirms our selection of 2-1/2" EMT.

Result Summary

ParameterValueStatus
Phase conductors3 × 3/0 AWG THWN-2 (0.2578 in² each)
Equipment grounding conductor1 × 2 AWG THWN-2 (0.1416 in²)
Total occupied area0.9150 in²
Required conduit area (at 40%)2.2875 in²
Selected conduit2-1/2" EMT (5.858 in² total area)
Actual fill percentage15.6%✓ PASS (≤ 40%)
Jam ratio4.77✓ PASS (> 3.0)

A 2-1/2 inch EMT conduit is the minimum trade size for 3 × 3/0 AWG THWN-2 phase conductors plus 1 × 2 AWG THWN-2 equipment grounding conductor. The actual fill of 15.6% provides excellent conditions for cable installation and heat dissipation, with room for future circuit additions.

Key References

  • NEC/NFPA 70:2023, Chapter 9, Table 1 — Percent of cross-section of conduit for conductors (40% for 3+ conductors)
  • NEC/NFPA 70:2023, Chapter 9, Table 4 — Dimensions and percent area of conduit and tubing (EMT)
  • NEC/NFPA 70:2023, Chapter 9, Table 5 — Dimensions of insulated conductors and fixture wires (THWN-2)
  • NEC/NFPA 70:2023, Annex C, Table C.1 — Maximum number of conductors in EMT
  • NEC/NFPA 70:2023, Article 358 — Electrical Metallic Tubing (EMT) installation requirements
  • NEC/NFPA 70:2023, 310.15(E)(1) — EGC not counted for conductor derating

Try It Yourself

Use the ECalPro Cable Sizing Calculator to perform conduit fill calculations for your installations. Enter the conductor types and quantities, select the conduit type (EMT, RMC, IMC, PVC, FMC), and the calculator determines the minimum trade size with fill percentage verification — including support for mixed conductor sizes and NEC Annex C cross-checking.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, the equipment grounding conductor (EGC) counts toward conduit fill calculations per NEC Chapter 9. Its cross-sectional area must be included when calculating total occupied area. However, per NEC 310.15(E)(1), the EGC does not count when determining conductor derating factors for current-carrying capacity. These are two separate calculations with different rules.
If all conductors are the same size and type, you can use NEC Annex C tables directly instead of calculating from first principles. Annex C provides pre-calculated maximum conductor counts for each combination of conductor size, insulation type, and conduit trade size. For mixed sizes (like our example with 3/0 and 2 AWG), you must calculate using Tables 4 and 5 as shown in this worked example.
The 40% fill limit for 3 or more conductors serves multiple purposes: it ensures adequate air space for heat dissipation (preventing cable overheating), limits pulling tension and sidewall bearing pressure during installation, reduces the risk of cable jamming in bends, and allows conductors to be pulled out for maintenance or replacement. For straight runs, higher fill might be physically possible but would make future maintenance extremely difficult and increase the risk of insulation damage during pulling.

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