Box Fill Calculator for Mississippi

NEC 2020 box fill math for EV charger installers working in Mississippi.

Every EVSE installation in Mississippi eventually hits a junction or device box — disconnects, splice points, pull boxes — all of which must satisfy NEC 2020 Article 314.16 fill rules.

Worked example for Mississippi

A 4-11/16" square × 2-1/8" deep box has a 42.0 in³ volume. Each #6 Cu conductor counts as 5.0 in³. With a 2-conductor + EGC EVSE branch landing in the box plus a device, you consume roughly 15-20 in³, leaving plenty of headroom — but a 60 A multi-port pull box can fill quickly with #4 or #2 AWG conductors.

Code & Utilities

Mississippi currently enforces the NEC 2020 edition, adopted in 2023. That includes Article 625 (Electric Vehicle Power Transfer System) requirements: 125% continuous-load sizing on EVSE branch circuits, GFCI protection at outdoor receptacles, and provisions for energy management systems on shared circuits.

In Mississippi, you'll most often interconnect with Entergy Mississippi, Mississippi Power, Tennessee Valley Authority. Each has its own service-upgrade timeline, EV rebate availability, and metering rules — confirm them before quoting commercial work.

Climate & Ampacity

In Mississippi, the 95°F summer ambient drives a 0.88× 75°C ampacity correction. Bake this into every Level 2 and DCFC conductor pick before you commit to a wire size. Because the correction is below 0.9, conductors that "look fine" on a 30°C ampacity table will not carry their nameplate current here — always derate explicitly.

Mississippi takeaway

Always run box-fill math when the EVSE disconnect lives more than a few inches from the unit itself — that intermediate junction is where Mississippi inspectors most often catch fill violations.