Box Fill Calculations
Voltage drop, wire sizing, load balancing
Box fill calculations ensure that junction boxes and device boxes have enough volume for the conductors, devices, and fittings inside them. Overcrowded boxes cause overheating, damaged insulation, and difficult installations. NEC 314.16 spells out exactly how to count every item in the box.
NEC 314.16 Conductor Equivalents
The NEC does not count every item the same way. Each type of item in the box is assigned a number of conductor equivalents based on the largest conductor connected to it:
| Item | Conductor Equivalents | Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Each conductor entering the box | 1 each | Count each hot, neutral, traveler |
| Conductors that pass through without splice | 1 each | Even if unbroken, they count |
| Pigtails originating inside the box | 0 | Do not count pigtails |
| All equipment grounding conductors | 1 total | No matter how many grounds — count as 1 |
| All internal cable clamps | 1 total | No matter how many clamps — count as 1 |
| Each yoke (device strap) | 2 each | Each switch or receptacle counts as 2 |
| Each support fitting (fixture studs, hickeys) | 1 each | Rarely encountered in standard boxes |
Key point: Grounds get 1 total (not 1 each), and clamps get 1 total (not 1 each). Devices count as 2 each.
Volume Allowance per Conductor
The volume per conductor equivalent depends on the largest conductor connected to that item:
| AWG | Volume per Conductor (cu in) |
|---|---|
| 14 | 2.00 |
| 12 | 2.25 |
| 10 | 2.50 |
| 8 | 3.00 |
| 6 | 5.00 |
For most residential and light commercial work, #12 AWG is the largest conductor in the box, so each conductor equivalent requires 2.25 cu in.
The Calculation
Worked Example: Typical Switch/Receptacle Box
Scenario: A device box contains:
- 4 #12 AWG conductors (2 hots, 2 neutrals entering the box)
- 2 #12 AWG equipment grounding conductors
- 1 single-pole switch
- 1 duplex receptacle
- 2 internal cable clamps
Step 1 — Count conductor equivalents:
| Item | Count | Equivalents |
|---|---|---|
| 4 conductors (#12) | 4 x 1 | 4 |
| All grounds (#12) | 1 total | 1 |
| 1 switch (device yoke) | 1 x 2 | 2 |
| 1 receptacle (device yoke) | 1 x 2 | 2 |
| All cable clamps | 1 total | 1 |
| Total | 10 |
Step 2 — Calculate minimum volume:
Step 3 — Select the box: A standard single-gang device box is typically 18 cu in — not large enough. A 4” square box (raised cover for devices) at 30.3 cu in or a deep 2-gang box would work.
Answer: The box must be at least 22.5 cubic inches. Use a 4” square box with a raised device cover, or a 2-gang box with sufficient volume.
Worked Example: Simple Junction Box
Scenario: A junction box contains:
- 6 #14 AWG conductors (3 entering from one cable, 3 from another, all spliced)
- 2 #14 AWG equipment grounds
- No devices
- No internal clamps (external connectors used)
Step 1 — Count conductor equivalents:
| Item | Count | Equivalents |
|---|---|---|
| 6 conductors (#14) | 6 x 1 | 6 |
| All grounds (#14) | 1 total | 1 |
| Devices | 0 | 0 |
| Clamps (external) | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 7 |
Step 2 — Calculate minimum volume:
Answer: The box must be at least 14.0 cubic inches. A standard 4” square by 1-1/2” deep box (21 cu in) provides plenty of room.
Common Metal Box Volumes
| Box Type | Volume (cu in) |
|---|---|
| 3” x 2” x 2” single gang | 10.0 |
| 3” x 2” x 2-1/2” single gang | 12.5 |
| 3” x 2” x 2-3/4” single gang | 14.0 |
| 3” x 2” x 3-1/2” single gang | 18.0 |
| 4” square x 1-1/4” | 18.0 |
| 4” square x 1-1/2” | 21.0 |
| 4” square x 2-1/8” | 30.3 |
| 4-11/16” square x 1-1/2” | 29.5 |
| 4-11/16” square x 2-1/8” | 42.0 |
Practice Problems
Test your understanding with these problems. Click to reveal each answer.
Problem 1: A box has 3 #14 conductors, 1 ground, 1 switch, and 2 internal clamps. What is the minimum volume?
| Item | Equivalents |
|---|---|
| 3 conductors | 3 |
| All grounds | 1 |
| 1 switch | 2 |
| All clamps | 1 |
| Total | 7 |
Answer: Minimum 14.0 cu in.
Problem 2: A 4” square box (21.0 cu in) contains #12 conductors. What is the maximum number of conductor equivalents it can hold?
Round down: 9 conductor equivalents.
Answer: The box can hold 9 conductor equivalents of #12 AWG.
Problem 3: A box has 8 #12 conductors, 4 grounds, 2 receptacles, and 2 internal clamps. What size box?
| Item | Equivalents |
|---|---|
| 8 conductors | 8 |
| All grounds | 1 |
| 2 receptacles | 4 |
| All clamps | 1 |
| Total | 14 |
Answer: Minimum 31.5 cu in. A 4-11/16” square by 2-1/8” box (42.0 cu in) would work.
Problem 4: A box has 6 #12 conductors, 3 grounds, 1 switch, 1 dimmer (counts as 2 like any device yoke), and no internal clamps. Minimum volume?
| Item | Equivalents |
|---|---|
| 6 conductors | 6 |
| All grounds | 1 |
| 1 switch | 2 |
| 1 dimmer | 2 |
| All clamps | 0 |
| Total | 11 |
Answer: Minimum 24.75 cu in. A 4” square by 2-1/8” box (30.3 cu in) would work.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Counting each ground wire separately. No matter how many grounding conductors enter the box — 2, 4, or 6 — they count as only 1 conductor equivalent total.
- Counting each clamp separately. Same rule as grounds: all internal clamps combined count as 1 total.
- Forgetting to count devices as 2. Each switch, receptacle, or dimmer on a yoke counts as 2 conductor equivalents, not 1.
- Counting pigtails. Short pigtails that originate inside the box (for connecting devices to spliced wires) are not counted. Only conductors that enter the box from outside are counted.
- Using the wrong volume per conductor. If the box has mixed wire sizes, use the volume for the largest conductor connected to each item. For grounds, use the volume for the largest ground wire. For devices, use the volume for the largest conductor connected to that device.
Key Takeaways
- NEC 314.16 governs box fill — every conductor, device, ground, and clamp must be accounted for
- Grounds = 1 total, clamps = 1 total, regardless of how many individual wires or clamps
- Each device (switch/receptacle) on a yoke = 2 conductor equivalents
- Multiply total conductor equivalents by the volume per conductor for the wire gauge used
- Always select a box with volume equal to or greater than the calculated minimum
- This is one of the most frequently tested calculations on the journeyman exam
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All Electrical topicsLast updated: March 28, 2026