HomeNEC ResourcesConductors + AmpacityNEC Table 310.16 Explained: How to Read Ampacity the Right Way

NEC Table 310.16 Explained: How to Read Ampacity the Right Way

NEC Table 310.16 is the ampacity table electricians use to find the allowable current for insulated conductors under normal conditions.

If you are studying conductor sizing, this table is one of the most important places in the NEC. It gives allowable ampacities based on conductor size, conductor material, and insulation temperature rating, but only under specific assumptions. That last part is where people get tripped up.

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What NEC Table 310.16 shows

Table 310.16 shows the allowable ampacity of insulated conductors.

In practical terms, it tells you how much current a conductor can carry continuously without exceeding its temperature rating under the table conditions. Mike Holt’s material states the same basic point: conductor ampacity is the current in amperes a conductor can carry continuously without exceeding its temperature rating under specific conditions of use.

The table breaks ampacity down by:

  • copper vs aluminum or copper-clad aluminum
  • conductor size in AWG or kcmil
  • insulation temperature rating
  • 60C, 75C, and 90C columns

The assumptions behind Table 310.16

This is the most important thing to understand.

Table 310.16 is based on:

  • not more than three current-carrying conductors
  • an ambient temperature of 30C (86F)

If those conditions change, the table value is not the final answer anymore.

That means you may need:

  • ambient temperature correction
  • ampacity adjustment for more than three current-carrying conductors
  • both, depending on the installation

This is why a lot of electricians say they “used Table 310.16” but still end up with the wrong ampacity. They used the table value without checking whether the installation still matched the table assumptions.

How to read NEC Table 310.16

The basic process is simple.

1. Find the conductor size

Start with the conductor size you are working with, such as 12 AWG, 6 AWG, or 3/0 AWG.

2. Choose the conductor material

Make sure you are reading the correct section for:

  • copper
  • aluminum or copper-clad aluminum

3. Choose the right temperature column

This is where many mistakes happen.

The table gives 60C, 75C, and 90C ampacities, but you do not automatically get to use the highest number. The insulation rating of the conductor matters, and so do the temperature limits of the terminals and equipment.

4. Confirm whether correction or adjustment applies

If the ambient temperature is not 30C (86F), or if there are more than three current-carrying conductors bundled together, the table ampacity must be corrected or adjusted.

Example: 12 AWG THHN from Table 310.16

A common example is 12 AWG THHN.

Under Table 310.16, 12 AWG THHN is shown as 30A in the 90C column. But that does not automatically mean you can protect every 12 AWG conductor at 30 amps in every situation.

Why not?

  • terminal limitations may control
  • small-conductor rules may control
  • ambient temperature correction may apply
  • conductor bundling adjustment may apply

That is why Table 310.16 is the starting point, not always the final answer.

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Ambient temperature correction

Mike Holt’s Q&A page tied to Table 310.16 explains that conductor ampacity must be corrected when ambient temperature is different from the table assumption.

The idea is simple:

  • if the ambient temperature is higher than 30C (86F), ampacity goes down
  • if the ambient temperature is lower than 30C (86F), ampacity may go up

For example, Mike Holt shows:

  • 12 THHN with a 90C ampacity of 30A
  • correction factor applied from the ambient correction table
  • corrected ampacity calculated from the Table 310.16 base ampacity

So when electricians talk about “table ampacity,” they should really mean:
table ampacity before any required correction or adjustment.

More than three current-carrying conductors

The other major issue is conductor bundling.

If you have more than three current-carrying conductors in a raceway or cable for more than the allowed short length, Table 310.16 ampacities must be adjusted downward.

Mike Holt’s examples show this clearly:

  • four current-carrying conductors require an adjustment factor
  • eight current-carrying conductors require a larger reduction
  • the final ampacity is the Table 310.16 value multiplied by the adjustment factor

This matters a lot in:

  • conduit runs with multiple circuits
  • wireways
  • multiwire raceways
  • crowded commercial installations

Short raceways exception

Another detail electricians miss is that conductor adjustment rules do not apply the same way to every short raceway section.

Mike Holt’s Q&A explains that for certain raceways not exceeding 24 inches, the bundling adjustment from the conductor adjustment table does not apply.

That is a test-prep detail worth remembering because it shows up in exam-style questions and field interpretation.

Table 310.16 is about ampacity, not voltage drop

The Mike Holt sample PDF makes another useful point: Table 310.16 is based on temperature and allowable ampacity. It does not account for voltage drop.

That means voltage drop may still lead you to increase conductor size, but that is a different issue from the base ampacity shown in the table.

So when sizing conductors, electricians often need to separate:

  • ampacity requirements
  • terminal and equipment limitations
  • overcurrent protection rules
  • voltage drop considerations

Mixing all of those together too early causes mistakes.

Common mistakes with NEC Table 310.16

Using the 90C column automatically

You still have to consider the conductor insulation, the terminals, and the specific code rules that apply.

Ignoring ambient temperature

The table assumes 30C (86F). Hotter conditions can reduce allowable ampacity.

Ignoring conductor adjustment

If there are more than three current-carrying conductors together, the base ampacity often must be reduced.

Treating table ampacity as final ampacity

Table 310.16 gives a starting value. The final allowable ampacity may be different after correction, adjustment, or other NEC rules are applied.

Confusing ampacity with voltage drop sizing

Voltage drop is a separate design issue. Table 310.16 does not solve that by itself.

Why this article fits your Conductors + Ampacity category

This topic is a true category fit because it is directly about:

  • conductor ampacity
  • ampacity tables
  • conductor sizing logic
  • correction and adjustment factors

It also sets up strong internal links to future articles on:

  • 310.12
  • conductor derating
  • parallel conductors
  • voltage drop
  • overcurrent protection
  • small-conductor rules

Final takeaway

NEC Table 310.16 is the core ampacity table many electricians use first when sizing conductors.

But the table only works correctly when you remember its assumptions:

  • no more than three current-carrying conductors
  • 30C (86F) ambient temperature
  • correct material and insulation column
  • any required correction and adjustment applied afterward

If you understand that, you will read the table more accurately in both exam questions and real installations.

FAQ

What is NEC Table 310.16 used for?
It is used to find the allowable ampacity of insulated conductors under the table conditions.

What conditions does Table 310.16 assume?
It assumes no more than three current-carrying conductors and an ambient temperature of 30C (86F).

Does NEC Table 310.16 include voltage drop?
No. It is based on conductor temperature and allowable ampacity, not voltage drop.

Do I always use the 90C column?
No. The correct usable ampacity depends on conductor insulation, terminals, equipment limits, and other NEC rules.

When do I adjust ampacity from Table 310.16?
When ambient temperature changes or when more than three current-carrying conductors are bundled together, among other applicable rules.

If you are studying ampacity, conductor sizing, and NEC exam topics, the VoltageLab app is a practical way to keep reviewing them with quizzes, explanations, and guided practice.

Sources

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Md Nazmul Islam
Md Nazmul Islam
Electrical engineering professional and founder of VoltageLab, focused on helping electricians and students learn faster and build real-world skills through simple, practical learning tools used by learners worldwide.

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