Sizing the Grounding Electrode Conductor — Table 250.66 Explained

The grounding electrode conductor (GEC) is the wire that ties your service grounded conductor (or a separately derived system's neutral) to the grounding electrode system — ground rods, concrete-encased electrodes, ground rings, metal water pipes. Size it from Table 250.66 based on the largest service-entrance conductor, then apply the three "max-out" exceptions in 250.66(A), (B), and (C).

What the GEC is — and isn't

From Article 100: the grounding electrode conductor is "a conductor used to connect the system grounded conductor or the equipment to a grounding electrode or to a point on the grounding electrode system." Two roles to keep distinct:

Different conductors, different tables, different jobs. Don't confuse them on the exam.

Table 250.66 — the basic table

Table 250.66 sizes the GEC based on the size of the largest ungrounded service-entrance conductor:

Largest service-entrance Cu (or equiv. Al)Cu GECAl GEC
2 AWG Cu or smaller / 1/0 Al or smaller8 AWG6 AWG
1 or 1/0 Cu / 2/0 or 3/0 Al6 AWG4 AWG
2/0 or 3/0 Cu / 4/0 or 250 kcmil Al4 AWG2 AWG
over 3/0 to 350 kcmil Cu / over 250 to 500 kcmil Al2 AWG1/0
over 350 to 600 kcmil Cu / over 500 to 900 kcmil Al1/03/0
over 600 to 1100 kcmil Cu / over 900 to 1750 kcmil Al2/04/0
over 1100 kcmil Cu / over 1750 kcmil Al3/0250 kcmil

For parallel conductor sets, you size by the equivalent conductor area. Two parallel sets of 250 kcmil Cu = 500 kcmil equivalent → fall in the "350 to 600 kcmil" row → 1/0 Cu GEC.

The three max-out exceptions — 250.66(A), (B), and (C)

These three rules CAP the GEC size for specific electrode types. Even if Table 250.66 says you need a 2/0 conductor based on a giant 800 A service, you may not need to run that much copper to a single ground rod.

250.66(A) — connection to ground rods, pipes, plates

If the GEC's sole connection is to a rod, pipe, or plate electrode, it doesn't have to be larger than:

"Sole connection" is the key phrase. If your GEC continues from the rod over to a concrete-encased electrode or a water pipe, the 6 AWG cap doesn't apply to that whole run — only to the section that's the sole tie to the rod. In practice, many installers run 6 AWG Cu from the service neutral all the way to the ground rod and stop there.

250.66(B) — concrete-encased electrode (Ufer ground)

If the GEC's sole connection is to a concrete-encased electrode (per 250.52(A)(3)), it doesn't need to be larger than 4 AWG copper. The concrete-encased electrode itself must be ≥ 20 ft of bare 4 AWG Cu or ≥ 20 ft of ½-in. or larger rebar, encased in ≥ 2 in. of concrete in direct contact with earth.

250.66(C) — ground ring

If the GEC's sole connection is to a ground ring (per 250.52(A)(4) — at least 20 ft of bare copper conductor not smaller than 2 AWG buried at least 30 in. below grade), it doesn't need to be larger than the ring conductor itself. So if the ring is 2 AWG Cu, the GEC can be 2 AWG Cu — no bigger.

Memory aid: Rod = 6, Concrete = 4, Ring = same as the ring. The "max-out" rule applies only to the portion that is the sole connection to that specific electrode. Run from service neutral → bus → individual taps to each electrode, and each tap can use its own max-out size.

The "largest service-entrance conductor" question — what counts

Three subtleties show up on the exam:

Worked example 1 — 200 A residential service, 4/0 Al SE

Find 4/0 Al in Table 250.66 — falls in the "2/0 or 3/0 Cu / 4/0 or 250 kcmil Al" row → 4 AWG Cu (or 2 AWG Al) GEC required by the basic table.

To the metal water pipe: run the full 4 AWG Cu (no max-out applies — the water pipe is not in 250.66(A)/(B)/(C)).

To the ground rod: per 250.66(A), the portion that's the sole connection to the rod doesn't have to be larger than 6 AWG Cu. Many installers run a 4 AWG Cu directly to the rod anyway — code allows the smaller, but the bigger isn't wrong.

Final: 4 AWG Cu from the service neutral to the water pipe (the primary GEC), with a 6 AWG Cu bonding jumper from the water pipe (or directly from the GEC bus) to the ground rod.

Worked example 2 — 400 A commercial service, 500 kcmil Cu

Find 500 kcmil Cu in Table 250.66 — falls in the "350 to 600 kcmil Cu" row → 1/0 Cu GEC.

To the concrete-encased electrode: per 250.66(B), the sole-connection portion doesn't have to be larger than 4 AWG Cu. Run 4 AWG Cu to the Ufer.

To each ground rod: 6 AWG Cu suffices (250.66(A)).

Final: a 1/0 Cu primary GEC tying the service neutral to a grounding-electrode bus, with a 4 AWG Cu tap to the Ufer and 6 AWG Cu taps to each rod. (Or run 1/0 Cu to the Ufer and tap off — the bigger conductor isn't a violation.)

Worked example 3 — parallel sets, 800 A service

Equivalent conductor area = 2 × 600 = 1200 kcmil Cu. Table 250.66: "over 1100 kcmil Cu" row → 3/0 Cu GEC.

To the ground ring: per 250.66(C), the sole-connection portion doesn't have to be larger than the ring conductor itself, which is 2 AWG. Run 2 AWG Cu to the ring (and bond to the ring with the same).

To the Ufer: per 250.66(B), 4 AWG Cu suffices.

Final: 3/0 Cu primary GEC → grounding-electrode bus → 2 AWG Cu to the ring, 4 AWG Cu to the Ufer.

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