What Is Conduit Fill?

Conduit fill refers to how much of a conduit's interior cross-sectional area is occupied by conductors. The NEC limits fill percentage to prevent overheating, protect conductor insulation, and ensure wires can be pulled without damage.

NEC Fill Percentage Rules (Chapter 9, Table 1)

  • 1 conductor: 53% maximum fill
  • 2 conductors: 31% maximum fill
  • 3 or more conductors: 40% maximum fill

These percentages apply to the total cross-sectional area of all conductors divided by the internal area of the conduit.

Step-by-Step Calculation Example

Scenario: You need to run the following conductors in EMT conduit: three 12 AWG THHN wires and one 12 AWG THHN ground wire (4 conductors total).

Step 1 — Find conductor cross-sectional area:
From NEC Chapter 9, Table 5, 12 AWG THHN has an area of 0.0133 in².

Step 2 — Calculate total conductor area:
4 conductors × 0.0133 in² = 0.0532 in²

Step 3 — Apply fill percentage:
With 4 conductors, maximum fill = 40%.
Required conduit area = 0.0532 ÷ 0.40 = 0.133 in²

Step 4 — Select conduit size:
From NEC Chapter 9, Table 4 (EMT internal areas):
½" EMT = 0.122 in² — too small
¾" EMT = 0.213 in² — sufficient ✓

Use ¾" EMT for this run.

Mixed Wire Sizes

When conductors are different sizes, add up the cross-sectional areas of each wire individually. For example, 2× 10 AWG THHN (0.0211 in² each) + 2× 12 AWG THHN (0.0133 in² each) = (2 × 0.0211) + (2 × 0.0133) = 0.0422 + 0.0266 = 0.0688 in². Divide by 0.40 = 0.172 in² required → use ¾" EMT (0.213 in²).

Conduit Types and Their Areas

Each conduit type has different wall thickness and therefore different internal areas for the same trade size:

  • EMT (Electrical Metallic Tubing) — thinnest walls, largest internal area for a given trade size
  • RMC (Rigid Metal Conduit) — thicker walls, smaller internal area
  • PVC Schedule 40/80 — non-metallic, used in wet/underground locations
  • FMC (Flexible Metal Conduit) — used for equipment connections, limited lengths

Always use the correct table for your conduit type — using EMT areas for RMC will undersize your conduit.

Practical Tips

  • Always leave room — size up when you are close to the limit, as future wire adds are common
  • Nipples 24 inches or less can be filled to 60% (NEC 310.15(A)(3))
  • Equipment grounding conductors count toward fill even when bare
  • Neutral conductors count toward fill even if they carry less current