NEC Chapter 9 Conduit Fill
What Size Conduit for 8/2 Wire?
The smallest conduit for 8/2 (two #8 plus one #10 ground) in EMT, PVC, RMC, and IMC at the NEC fill limit, with the area math and the calculator for any other mix.
Minimum Conduit for 8/2 by Type
| Conduit Type | Minimum Size |
|---|---|
| EMT | 1/2" |
| Schedule 40 PVC | 1/2" |
| RMC | 1/2" |
| IMC | 1/2" |
3 THHN conductors totaling 0.0943 sq in (NEC Chapter 9 Table 5). With three or more conductors the fill limit is 40% (Table 1), so the required internal area is 0.0943 ÷ 0.40 = 0.236 sq in, and each type's smallest trade size at or above that is shown.
Different Conductors? Calculate It
For a different wire mix, insulation type, or added conductors, enter your exact pull for the precise fill percentage and the smallest compliant conduit.
Frequently Asked Questions
What size conduit do I need for 8/2 wire?
8/2 wire pulled as individual THHN conductors (two #8 plus one #10 ground) needs 1/2 inch EMT, or 1/2 inch Schedule 40 PVC, at the NEC 40% fill limit. The 3 conductors total 0.0943 square inches (NEC Chapter 9 Table 5); with three or more conductors the raceway may be filled to 40%, so the smallest conduit whose 40% area covers 0.0943 sq in is 1/2 inch EMT.
What is the minimum EMT size for 8/2?
1/2 inch EMT. Its internal area at 40% fill exceeds the 0.0943 sq in that 8/2 (two #8 plus one #10 ground) occupies. Going one trade size down would exceed 40% and violate NEC Chapter 9 Table 1. If you are running RMC use 1/2 inch; IMC and PVC each have their own internal area, shown in the table above.
Does the ground wire count for conduit fill on 8/2?
Yes. Every conductor in the raceway counts for fill, including the equipment grounding conductor (NEC Chapter 9 Table 1). That is why 8/2 is figured here as two #8 plus one #10 ground: the 3 conductors together, not just the current-carrying ones. Leaving the ground out of the count is the most common conduit-fill mistake.
Can I use 8/2 as NM cable (Romex) in conduit instead?
If you sleeve an intact 8/2 NM cable (Romex) rather than pulling individual THHN, the fill is figured differently: a single cable is treated at the 53% one-conductor limit using the cable's actual cross-sectional area (NEC Chapter 9, Note 9), which usually needs a larger conduit than individual THHN. Most conduit runs use individual THHN conductors, which is what the 1/2 inch answer above assumes.
Conduit Size for Other Wire
Conduit for 6/3 Wire
3/4″ EMT for 4 conductors (0.1732 sq in).
Conduit for 6/2 Wire
3/4″ EMT for 3 conductors (0.1225 sq in).
Conduit for 8/3 Wire
3/4″ EMT for 4 conductors (0.1309 sq in).
Conduit for 10/3 Wire
1/2″ EMT for 4 conductors (0.0844 sq in).
Conduit for 10/2 Wire
1/2″ EMT for 3 conductors (0.0633 sq in).
Conduit for 12/3 Wire
1/2″ EMT for 4 conductors (0.0532 sq in).
Conduit for 12/2 Wire
1/2″ EMT for 3 conductors (0.0399 sq in).
Conduit Fill Calculator
Any mix of conductors in EMT, IMC, RMC, or PVC, with the fill percentage.
Conduit sized. Will the wire reach?
Getting 8/2 in the pipe is one thing. Confirm the gauge holds up over the run length with the voltage drop calculator before you pull.