Wire Ampacity & Derating Calculator (NEC 310.16)

Find the real-world power limit of your wire in hot or crowded conditions.

1Conductor Specs

2Conditions

20°C80°C

No Derating

Usually 75°C for modern breakers.

Allowable Ampacity

-Amps
-
Base (90C)
-
Derated Value
--
Notice: The ampacity is limited to the 75C column because the terminal temperature rating (75C) is lower than the wire insulation rating (90C).

Calculation Breakdown

1

Base Ampacity

12 AWG Copper @ 90C column (Table 310.16)

30 A
2

Temp Correction

Ambient 30°C (86°F)

x 1.00
3

Fill Adjustment

3 Current-Carrying Conductors

x 1.00
Calculated Derated Value30.0 A
Terminal Limit (75C)
25 A

Ampacity Adjustment Formula

Iadj = Itable × Ftemp × Ffill

NEC 310.15(B) & (C) Adjustments

NEC 310.15(B) outlines ambient temperature correction factors. NEC 310.15(C)(1) requires ampacity reduction when more than 3 current-carrying conductors are bundled together in a raceway or cable.

Frequently Asked Questions

When do I need to derate wire?

You must derate when (1) the ambient temperature exceeds 86°F (30°C) or (2) there are more than 3 current-carrying conductors in the same pipe/raceway.

Does the neutral wire count as a current-carrying conductor?

Typically, no. In a balanced system, it carries only unbalanced current. However, if the load is mostly non-linear (electronics, LED lights), the neutral DOES count.

Can I start derating from the 90°C column?

Yes! Even if your breakers are rated 75°C, you can use the 90°C ampacity of THHN/THWN-2 conductors as the starting point for derating calculations.

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