ModerateNEC 2023 · 2026 · Updated Apr 2026

2 AWG THHN Aluminum Ampacity & Derating

Table 310.16 values are identical across NEC 2017, 2020, and 2023 editions.
2 AWG THHN aluminum is rated 100A at 90°C and 90A at 75°C per NEC 2023 Table 310.16. Most equipment terminations are rated 75°C, making 90A the practical limit. Suitable for 90A circuits.
90°C100A
75°C90A
Breaker90A
Conduit1" EMT
V-Drop/100ft2.4%
Ampacity Derating Walkthrough
Base Ampacity Table 310.16, 90°C
100A
Temp Correction 86°F × 1.0
100A
Bundling ≤3 CCC × 1.0
100A
Termination 110.14(C)(1)(a)(2) 75°C
90A −10%
Usable Ampacity
90A
Common inspection failure: Using 100A (90°C) without accounting for the 75°C termination limit. Most panels and breakers are rated 75°C per 110.14(C). The usable ampacity is 90A, not 100A.

Calculation Walkthrough

Step 1Look Up Base Ampacity
Table 310.16

Per NEC 2023 Table 310.16, 2 AWG aluminum THHN (90°C column) = 100A base. Assumes ≤3 CCC at 30°C ambient.

Base =100A
Step 2Temperature Correction
Table 310.15(B)(1)

At 30.0°C (86°F), factor = 1.0. No reduction. At 50°C attic: factor drops to ~0.82 for 90°C insulation.

After temp =100A × 1.0 = 100A
Step 3Bundling Adjustment
Table 310.15(C)(1)

≤3 CCC = factor 1.0. EGC + neutral (unbalanced) not counted per 310.15(E). Typical 240V circuit: 2 hots + N + G = 2 CCC.

After bundling =100A × 1.0 = 100A
Step 4Termination Limit
110.14(C)(1)(a)(2)

Equipment termination governs the final ampacity. Circuits ≤100A: use 60°C column unless conductor + equipment both rated 75°C. Modern panels and breakers are listed for 75°C terminations, so the 75°C column value of 90A becomes the ceiling. The 90°C rating is only used as the starting point for temperature correction and bundling derating. After all adjustments, the result cannot exceed the termination column value. This is the single most commonly failed inspection item.

Final =90A
Step 5Voltage Drop at 100 ft
210.19(A) Note 4

NEC recommends limiting voltage drop to 3% on branch circuits and 5% total (branch + feeder combined). For 2 AWG aluminum carrying 90A at 240V single-phase over a 100-foot one-way run: Vd = (2 × L × I × R) / 1000. The resistance per 1000 ft for 2 AWG aluminum at 75°C is used from NEC Chapter 9 Table 8. At 90A and 100 ft, the drop is 5.7V (2.4%). For longer runs or higher loads, use the voltage drop calculator with your specific distance and load.

V-Drop =2.4% (5.7V at 240V)

Common Applications

2 AWG THHN aluminum at 90A covers 95-115A feeders and is the standard choice for 100A subpanel feeds in residential and light commercial work. Paired with a 100A breaker. For a detached ADU (accessory dwelling unit), guest house, or large workshop, 2 AWG Aluminum provides full 100A service capacity. In conduit, 2 AWG requires a minimum 1" EMT for a typical 3-conductor plus ground pull. For aluminum feeders serving 100A subpanels, the equivalent size is 1/0 AWG aluminum at lower material cost. When the feeder run exceeds 100 feet, voltage drop often requires upsizing to 1 AWG or larger regardless of ampacity. Always verify voltage drop on feeder runs to detached structures.

Need more capacity? 1 AWG provides 100A. See also: copper vs aluminum.

NEC 2020 vs NEC 2023

Feature
20202023
Table #
310.15(B)(16)310.16
75°C
90A90A
90°C
100A100A
NEC 2020
Table 310.15(B)(16)
2 AWG Au 75°C = 90A
2 AWG Au 90°C = 100A
NEC 2023
Table 310.16 renumbered
2 AWG Au 75°C = 90A
2 AWG Au 90°C = 100A

Ampacity values for 2 AWG aluminum are identical across NEC 2017, 2020, and 2023 editions. The only change affecting this conductor is the table renumbering from Table 310.15(B)(16) to Table 310.16 in the 2023 edition. This renumbering was part of a broader reorganization of Article 310 that also moved temperature correction factors from Table 310.15(B)(2)(a) to Table 310.15(B)(1) and bundling adjustment factors from Table 310.15(B)(3)(a) to Table 310.15(C)(1). When citing NEC references on permits or inspection reports, use the table numbers that match your state's adopted code year. States on NEC 2020 or earlier should cite Table 310.15(B)(16); states that have adopted NEC 2023 should cite Table 310.16.

Quick Reference

ConductorTempAmpsUse
2 AWG Aluminum TW60°C75AWet / underground
2 AWG Aluminum THW75°C90AStandard circuits
2 AWG Aluminum THHN90°C100ADerating start only
2 AWG Aluminum free air75/90°C135A / 150ATable 310.17
2 AWG Copper THHN75°C115ACopper equivalent
NEC 2026: Ampacity values for 2 AWG aluminum are unchanged. Table renumbering from 2023 is retained. See NEC 2026 changes for Article 310 updates as states begin adoption.

Frequently asked questions

What is the ampacity of 2 AWG Aluminum wire?

2 AWG THHN Aluminum has a base ampacity of 100A at 90°C per NEC 2023 Table 310.16. After applying the 110.14(C) termination temperature limit, the usable ampacity is 90A for most installations. This is the value you use for circuit sizing and breaker selection.

What size breaker do I need for 2 AWG aluminum wire?

Pair 2 AWG aluminum with a 90A breaker. The wire's usable ampacity of 90A must equal or exceed the breaker rating. For continuous loads (running 3+ hours), the load must not exceed 80% of the breaker rating (72A on a 90A breaker). See the full ampacity table for all wire sizes.

Can I use 2 AWG wire in conduit?

Yes. 2 AWG THHN is rated for conduit installations including EMT, PVC, and rigid metal conduit. The 100A base ampacity applies in conduit with no more than 3 current-carrying conductors. If bundling more than 3 conductors, apply the bundling adjustment factors from NEC Table 310.15(C)(1).

How far can I run 2 AWG aluminum wire?

The maximum distance depends on load and voltage. For 2 AWG aluminum at 90A on a 240V circuit, use the voltage drop calculator with your specific distance. As a rule of thumb, keep voltage drop under 3% for branch circuits. Longer runs may require upsizing the conductor.

Derating matrix: all conditions

Ampacity of 2 AWG aluminum THHN (100A base at 90°C) after temperature correction per 310.15(B)(1) and bundling adjustment per 310.15(C)(1). The usable limit after 110.14(C) is 90A.

Ambient °C1-3 CCC4-6 CCC7-9 CCC10-20 CCC
10°C (50°F)114A92A80A57A
15°C (59°F)112A89A78A56A
20°C (68°F)108A86A75A54A
25°C (77°F)104A83A72A52A
30°C (86°F)100A80A70A50A
35°C (95°F)96A76A67A48A
40°C (104°F)91A72A63A45A
45°C (113°F)87A69A60A43A
50°C (122°F)82A65A57A41A

At/above usable limit Below limit Severely restricted

Bottom line: In a hot attic (50°C) with standard bundling, 2 AWG aluminum drops to 82A - a 18% loss from the 100A base rating. Worst case (50°C, 20 conductors) drops to 41A, a 59% reduction. Use the ampacity calculator to check your exact conditions.
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Important: For reference only. Not a substitute for a licensed electrician. Electrical work can cause serious injury, death, fire, or property damage if performed incorrectly. Always hire a licensed electrician for electrical work, especially for service upgrades, panel work, and 240V circuits. Values are derived from NFPA 70 (NEC) for educational purposes. Always verify against your locally adopted NEC edition and amendments - local jurisdictions may enforce stricter requirements. WireRef provides reference information only and is not responsible for work performed based on this content. NEC® is a registered trademark of the National Fire Protection Association. Free NEC access via NFPA · OSHA Electrical Safety · Terms of use.

NEC 2023 references verified April 2026

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