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NEC Conduit Fill Calculator

Conduit fill per NEC Chapter 9. 53%/31%/40% fill limits, EMT/RMC/PVC conduit types.

Calculation Mode
Conduit & Insulation Type
Conductors

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Conduit fill is the percentage of a conduit's internal cross-sectional area occupied by the cables routed through it. NEC Article 344.22 and Chapter 9 Table 1 limit fill to 40 percent for three or more conductors to allow adequate heat dissipation, prevent mechanical damage during cable pulling, and ensure future maintenance access.

How to Calculate Conduit Fill

  1. 1
    Find conduit internal areaLook up the internal cross-sectional area of the conduit from NEC Chapter 9 Table 4 based on the conduit type (EMT, RMC, PVC) and trade size. This provides the total available area in square millimetres.[NEC Chapter 9 Table 4]
  2. 2
    Calculate total cable areaSum the outer cross-sectional areas of all cables to be installed using dimensions from NEC Chapter 9 Table 5. Use the overall diameter including insulation and jacket for each cable type.[NEC Chapter 9 Table 5]
  3. 3
    Apply fill percentage limitCompare total cable area against the allowable fill from NEC Chapter 9 Table 1: one conductor at 53%, two conductors at 31%, and three or more at 40% of conduit area.[NEC Chapter 9 Table 1]
  4. 4
    Select conduit size or adjustIf the fill exceeds the limit, either select a larger conduit size or reduce the number of cables per conduit. Recalculate to confirm compliance and check the jam ratio for large cables.[NEC Article 344.22]

How Conduit Fill Works

The conduit fill calculator determines the minimum conduit or raceway size required for a given set of conductors, based on the maximum fill percentages specified in the NEC/NFPA 70:2023.

NEC Chapter 9 Table 1 establishes the permitted fill percentages: 53% for one conductor, 31% for two conductors, and 40% for three or more conductors. These percentages represent the maximum proportion of the conduit's internal cross-sectional area that may be occupied by conductors (including insulation). The reduced percentages for multiple conductors account for the difficulty of pulling cables through bends and the increased heat buildup from grouped conductors.

The calculation uses two key data sources. Chapter 9 Table 4 provides the internal cross-sectional areas for each conduit type and trade size — including EMT (Article 358), RMC (Article 344), IMC (Article 342), PVC (Article 352), and other raceway types defined in Articles 344 through 362. Chapter 9 Table 5 provides the cross-sectional area of each conductor type including its insulation (THHN, THWN, XHHW, etc.), while Table 5A provides dimensions for compact conductors.

The total conductor fill area is calculated as the sum of individual conductor areas from Table 5: A_total = SUM(n_i x A_i), where n_i is the quantity and A_i is the area per conductor. The minimum conduit size is then the smallest trade size whose allowable fill area (from Table 4, multiplied by the applicable Table 1 percentage) equals or exceeds A_total.

The calculator also evaluates the jam ratio — the ratio of the conduit internal diameter to the conductor outer diameter. A jam ratio between 2.8 and 3.2 creates a higher risk of conductor jamming during installation, where conductors can wedge against each other in a triangular pattern.

Results include the selected conduit size, actual fill percentage, fill area breakdown per conductor, jam ratio assessment, and alternative raceway options with their respective fill percentages.

NEC Conduit Fill Limits

Number of ConductorsMaximum Fill %Reference
153%NEC Chapter 9, Table 1
231%NEC Chapter 9, Table 1
3 or more40%NEC Chapter 9, Table 1

Source: NEC/NFPA 70:2023 Chapter 9, Table 1

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the NEC conduit fill limits?
NEC Chapter 9 Table 1 specifies maximum conduit fill percentages: 53% for one conductor, 31% for two conductors, and 40% for three or more conductors. These percentages refer to the total cross-sectional area of all conductors (including insulation) relative to the internal cross-sectional area of the conduit. These limits ensure adequate space for pulling conductors without damage, allow for heat dissipation, and accommodate cable movement due to thermal expansion.
How do I calculate conduit fill for mixed conductor sizes?
For mixed conductor sizes, use NEC Chapter 9 Table 5 (or Table 5A for compact conductors) to find the cross-sectional area of each conductor including insulation, then sum all conductor areas. Divide the total conductor area by the internal area of the conduit from Table 4 and compare to the 40% fill limit (for 3+ conductors). Equipment grounding conductors per Table 5 must be included in the fill calculation. Nipples (conduit 24 inches or less per NEC 376.22) are permitted 60% fill.
What conduit types are covered by NEC Chapter 9?
NEC Chapter 9 Table 4 provides internal area data for all common conduit types: EMT (Electrical Metallic Tubing, Article 358), IMC (Intermediate Metal Conduit, Article 342), RMC (Rigid Metal Conduit, Article 344), PVC Schedule 40 and 80 (Article 352), LFMC (Liquidtight Flexible Metal Conduit, Article 350), and FMC (Flexible Metal Conduit, Article 348). Each conduit type has different internal dimensions for the same trade size, so the correct table column must be used for accurate fill calculations.
Does the conduit fill calculation include ground wires?
Yes, equipment grounding conductors (EGC) must be included in conduit fill calculations per NEC 300.17. The EGC area is found in NEC Table 5 based on conductor type and size. For bare conductors, use Chapter 9 Table 8 for the conductor area. NEC 250.122 specifies the minimum EGC size based on the upstream overcurrent device rating. Note that the EGC is typically smaller than the phase conductors, but in a conduit with many circuits, the cumulative grounding conductor area can significantly impact fill calculations.
What happens if conduit fill exceeds the NEC limit?
Exceeding NEC conduit fill limits can cause physical damage to conductor insulation during pulling, excessive heat buildup leading to insulation degradation and premature failure, and jamming of conductors making future maintenance pulls impossible. When the calculated fill exceeds 40%, the solution is to use a larger conduit trade size, split conductors into parallel conduits, or use compact conductors (NEC Table 5A) which have smaller overall diameters. For very long runs, jam ratio (the ratio of conduit ID to conductor OD) should also be checked to avoid conductor jamming.

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Standards Reference

  • NEC/NFPA 70:2023 — Chapter 9, Tables 1, 4, 5, 5A
  • NEC Article 344-362 (raceway types)