Conduit Fill Calculator for Texas
NEC 2020 conduit fill math for EV charger installers working in Texas.
Multifamily and workplace EV installs in Texas routinely stack several #6 or #8 AWG home runs in shared EMT — at which point NEC 2020 Chapter 9 fill rules and 310.15(C)(1) adjustment factors both kick in.
Worked example for Texas
Stacking 8 × #6 AWG THWN-2 home runs (each with 2 conductors + EGC) in a single EMT means the raceway sees 16 current-carrying conductors. That triggers a 0.7× ampacity adjustment, on top of Texas's 0.82× temperature correction. Fill itself stays under the NEC 40% ceiling at roughly 1¼" EMT.
Code & Utilities
The applicable code in Texas is the NEC 2020, which the state 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 Texas, you'll most often interconnect with Oncor Electric Delivery, CenterPoint Energy, AEP Texas, Austin Energy, CPS Energy. Their make-ready, time-of-use, and demand-charge structures vary widely; pull the specific tariff before sizing service equipment.
Climate & Ampacity
Texas's representative summer design ambient is around 101°F, which yields a 0.82× ampacity correction factor at 75°C terminations per NEC 310.15(B)(1). 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.
Texas takeaway
Always run the conduit-fill math first when laying out a multifamily EVSE rack — it's the constraint that most often forces a re-spec from #6 to #4 or from EMT to a larger trade size.