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Conduit Fill Calculator per NEC (NFPA 70) for Industrial Installations

NEC (NFPA 70)2026 EditionIndustrial InstallationsNew Edition

Industrial conduit fill per NEC (NFPA 70) 2026 Chapter 9 must accommodate large feeders (250-750 kcmil), parallel conductor sets per Article 310.10(G), and motor circuits per Article 430. RMC (Article 344) and FMC (Article 348) are common in industrial environments. Fill limits remain 40% for three or more conductors per Table 1.

Quick Reference Table

NEC 2026 Key References for Industrial Conduit FillNEC (NFPA 70) (2026 Edition)
ParameterValue / RequirementClause Reference
Maximum Fill Percentages1 wire: 53%, 2 wires: 31%, 3+ wires: 40% of conduit areaChapter 9, Table 1
Conductor Areas — Large GaugeAreas for 250–750 kcmil conductors with THHN, XHHW-2, USE-2 insulationChapter 9, Table 5
Conduit Internal AreasInternal area by trade size for RMC, IMC, EMT, PVC Schedule 40/80Chapter 9, Table 4
Rigid Metal Conduit (RMC)Heavy-wall threaded conduit for industrial exposed runs and hazardous locationsArticle 344
Flexible Metal Conduit (FMC)Used for final connections to vibrating equipment, motors, and machineryArticle 348
Parallel Conductor SetsEach parallel conduit contains one conductor per phase — fill calculated per conduitArticle 310.10(G)

How to Calculate Conduit Fill for Industrial Installations

  1. 1

    Identify conductor sizes from feeder and motor schedules

    Determine each conductor's wire gauge from the electrical design: feeder conductors sized per Article 215, motor branch circuit conductors per Article 430.22 (125% of motor FLC), and equipment grounding conductors per Table 250.122.

  2. 2

    Check for parallel conductor sets

    For feeders using parallel conductors per Article 310.10(G), each parallel raceway must contain one conductor per phase, one neutral (if applicable), and one equipment grounding conductor. Calculate fill for each individual conduit, not the total set.

  3. 3

    Look up conductor areas from Chapter 9 Table 5

    Find the cross-sectional area for each conductor by wire gauge and insulation type. For industrial installations, common insulation types are THHN (dry locations), XHHW-2 (wet/dry), and RHH (high-temperature rated for engine rooms).

  4. 4

    Sum conductor areas and apply fill percentage

    Add all conductor areas within the conduit. For 3 or more conductors, the minimum conduit area is total conductor area divided by 0.40 per Chapter 9 Table 1. The calculator performs this automatically.

  5. 5

    Select conduit type for the installation environment

    Choose RMC (Article 344) for general industrial exposed runs, IMC (Article 342) where weight reduction is needed, FMC (Article 348) for motor connections with vibration, or rigid PVC (Article 352) for underground and corrosive environments.

  6. 6

    Verify jam ratio for large conductors

    For three large conductors in a conduit, check the jam ratio (conduit ID / conductor OD). A ratio between 2.8 and 3.2 creates jamming risk during pulling. If the ratio falls in this range, increase the conduit trade size by one step.

Try the Conduit Fill Calculator

Run compliant NEC (NFPA 70) calculations for industrial installations — free, instant results with full clause references.

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NEC vs IEC 60364 Cable Sizing Comparison

ParameterNECIEC 60364
Conductor sizing unitAWG/kcmilmm²
Voltage drop recommendation3% branch / 5% total4% lighting / 5% other
Reference ambient temp30°C30°C (air), 20°C (ground)
Continuous load multiplier1.25x requiredNot explicitly required
Ampacity tableTable 310.16 (60/75/90°C)Tables B.52.2–B.52.13
Conduit fill limit40% for 3+ conductorsNot specified (derating instead)

Frequently Asked Questions

Per NEC Article 310.10(G), a 400 A feeder might use two parallel sets of 3/0 AWG THHN conductors. Each conduit gets one 3/0 per phase (three conductors), one neutral (if required), and one EGC. Calculate the fill for each individual conduit using the 40% limit from Chapter 9 Table 1. Each conduit is sized independently — do not sum conductor areas across parallel raceways.
The 40% fill limit in Chapter 9 Table 1 is a physical fill constraint, not a thermal derating trigger. However, ampacity adjustment for more than three current-carrying conductors in a raceway is required per NEC 310.15(C)(1). These are separate requirements: you must comply with both the 40% physical fill AND the ampacity adjustment factors. The conduit fill calculator handles the physical constraint; verify ampacity separately.
Per NEC Article 501.10(A), Class I Division 1 hazardous (classified) locations require threaded rigid metal conduit (RMC) or threaded steel intermediate metal conduit (IMC) with explosion-proof fittings. EMT and PVC are not permitted. When calculating conduit fill for hazardous location raceways, use the RMC or IMC columns in Chapter 9 Table 4 — these have slightly different internal areas than EMT.

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