How Many Amps Does a 7.5 HP single-phase Motor Draw at 220V?

At 220V, 7.5 horsepower equals roughly 35.2 amps of running current on a single-phase circuit. One HP is 746 watts of mechanical output, but motors are not 100% efficient, so the electrical draw is higher. Applying V × Eff × PF: 5,595W ÷ (220 × 0.85 × 0.85) = 5,595 ÷ 158.95 = 35.2 A.

7.5 HP single-phase motor at 220V
35.2 Amps running
Calculated running current at the motor terminals at the assumed 85% efficiency and PF 0.85. This is a conversion from the nameplate horsepower using those assumptions, not a measured value; a real meter reading depends on the motor's actual nameplate efficiency, loading, temperature, and motor design.
NEC Table 430.248 FLC (code sizing base)40 A
Conductor min ampacity (NEC 430.22, 125% of FLC)50 A
Electrical input (HP × 746 ÷ efficiency)6,582.35 W
35.2
40

Use the running amps for metering and energy calculations. For branch-circuit sizing, AC motors use the NEC Table 430.248 / 430.250 full-load current under NEC 430.6(A)(1); DC motors use the motor nameplate full-load current under NEC 430.6(A)(3), with Table 430.247 as the reference. Three-phase current is shown per line on a balanced circuit.

Formula (single-phase)

I(A) = (HP × 746) ÷ (V × Eff × PF)

(7.5 × 746) ÷ (220 × 0.85 × 0.85) = 5,595 ÷ 158.95 = 35.2 A
  1. Convert HP to watts: 7.5 × 746 = 5,595W
  2. Denominator: 220 × 0.85 × 0.85 = 158.95
  3. Result: 5,595 ÷ 158.95 = 35.2 amps

NEC Reference Values

This section lists the Code reference numbers a motor branch circuit is sized from. Final conductor, breaker, disconnect, and overload selection is an install decision a licensed electrician makes against the motor nameplate, the actual install conditions, and the applicable NEC articles, not a decision a conversion page can make for you.

NEC Sizing Base: NEC Table 430.248 FLC

Per NEC 430.6(A)(1), motor branch-circuit conductors, switches, and overcurrent protection are sized from the values in Table 430.248 (single-phase) or Table 430.250 (three-phase), not from the motor nameplate and not from a calculated full-load amps. For a 7.5 HP single-phase motor at 220V, the table value is 40 A (the 115V column covers 110-120V systems under 430.6(A)(1)).

The 35.2 A shown in the hero is the calculated running current at 85% efficiency and PF 0.85. This is a conversion from the nameplate horsepower under those assumptions, not a measured value; a real meter reading depends on the motor's actual efficiency, loading, temperature, and design. Use this figure for energy and metering estimates, and use 40 A as the reference FLC when an electrician walks through NEC 430 against the nameplate.

NEC 430.22 Conductor Rule (reference formula)

NEC 430.22 requires motor branch-circuit conductor ampacity of at least 125% of the Code sizing FLC. As a reference calculation against the NEC Table 430.248 value: 40 × 1.25 = 50 A. The selected conductor is taken from NEC Table 310.16 at the applicable termination temperature column, with ambient, bundling, and cable-type adjustments applied by the installer. Motor branch-circuit conductors are exempt from the 240.4(D) small-conductor rule via 240.4(G).

NEC 430.52 Overcurrent Protection (code caps)

NEC Table 430.52(C)(1) gives the maximum rating for motor short-circuit and ground-fault protection as a percentage of the Code sizing FLC. The percentage depends on the device type:

Device TypeMaximum % of Table FLC (430.52(C)(1))
Non-time-delay fuse300%
Dual-element (time-delay) fuse175%
Inverse-time circuit breaker250%
Instantaneous-trip circuit breaker800%

These percentages are maximum caps, not install picks. A real circuit applies the percentage against the Code sizing FLC for the specific device type, rounds up to a standard size per 430.52(C)(1)(a), and is verified against the motor nameplate and the install conditions by the installer. The elevated percentages exist so short-circuit protection does not nuisance-trip on locked-rotor startup inrush.

Locked Rotor (Startup) Current

During the first 2-5 seconds of startup, a squirrel-cage induction motor typically draws 5 to 7 times the NEC Table 430.248 FLC of 40 A (roughly 200 to 280 A). This is why the 430.52(C)(1) percentages above are so much higher than running current: the short-circuit/ground-fault protective device has to ride through locked-rotor inrush without tripping. Actual LRA is set by the motor's NEMA code letter on the nameplate and should be checked there for a real install.

CurrentAmpsDuration
Calculated running current (meter)35.2 AContinuous at full load
NEC Table 430.248 FLC (Code reference)40 ASizing base, not metered
Locked rotor (typical, 5-7×)200-280 A2-5 seconds

Operating Cost

Motor mechanical output is 5,595 W (7.5 HP × 746). Electrical input at the terminals is higher because no motor is 100% efficient: 5,595 ÷ 0.85 = 6,582.35 W. At $0.17/kWh, running cost is $1.12/hour or $268.56/month at 8 hours/day. Full breakdown at 6,582.35 W.

Amps by Motor Efficiency (single-phase)

Motor efficiency directly affects amp draw. A more efficient motor draws less current for the same HP output. Values below are the calculated single-phase running current at 220V and PF 0.85:

EfficiencyAmps at 220VWatts ConsumedWaste Heat
75%39.89 A7,460 W1,865 W
80%37.4 A6,993.75 W1,398.75 W
85%35.2 A6,582.35 W987.35 W
90%33.24 A6,216.67 W621.67 W
95%31.49 A5,889.47 W294.47 W

Other HP Values at 220V (single-phase)

Running current is the calculated single-phase draw at 85% efficiency and 0.85 PF (a conversion from HP under those assumptions, not a measured value). NEC Table FLC is the value from NEC Table 430.248 used for branch-circuit conductor and OCP sizing under NEC 430.6(A)(1). LRA is estimated at 5-7× the NEC table FLC; rows outside the table show n/a because there is no code-authoritative LRA basis for that HP/voltage/phase combination. Row links open each result page in single-phase mode.

HPRunning Amps
(calculated)
NEC Table 430.248 FLCLRA Estimate
(5-7× FLC)
1/8 HP0.5867 Aoff-tablen/a
1/6 HP0.7824 A2.2 A11-15.4 A
1/4 HP1.17 A2.9 A14.5-20.3 A
1/3 HP1.56 A3.6 A18-25.2 A
1/2 HP2.35 A4.9 A24.5-34.3 A
3/4 HP3.52 A6.9 A34.5-48.3 A
1 HP4.69 A8 A40-56 A
1.5 HP7.04 A10 A50-70 A
2 HP9.39 A12 A60-84 A
3 HP14.08 A17 A85-119 A
5 HP23.47 A28 A140-196 A
7.5 HP35.2 A40 A200-280 A
10 HP46.93 A50 A250-350 A
15 HP70.4 Aoff-tablen/a
20 HP93.87 Aoff-tablen/a
25 HP117.33 Aoff-tablen/a
30 HP140.8 Aoff-tablen/a
40 HP187.73 Aoff-tablen/a
50 HP234.66 Aoff-tablen/a
75 HP352 Aoff-tablen/a

Frequently Asked Questions

At the terminals, a 7.5 HP single-phase motor at 220V draws about 35.2 amps at 85% efficiency and 0.85 power factor. For NEC branch-circuit sizing use the NEC Table 430.248 full-load current instead: 40 A.
At 220V single-phase, motor branches are dedicated circuits, not general-purpose receptacles. Common NEMA configurations at this voltage are the 6-series (6-15, 6-20, 6-30, 6-50) and the 14-series (14-30, 14-50) when a neutral is needed, sized to the motor branch-circuit OCP the installer picks under NEC 430.52(C)(1). The NEC Table 430.248 FLC of 40 A is the reference number an electrician feeds into 430.22 and 430.52, not a receptacle pick on its own. Verify against the nameplate and local code.
Operating cost is based on electrical input, not mechanical HP output. At 85% efficiency, a 7.5 HP motor draws about 6,582.35 W at the terminals. At $0.17/kWh (US residential average, last reviewed April 2026), that is $1.12/hour or $268.56/month at 8 hours/day.
NEC 430.22 requires motor branch-circuit conductors to have an ampacity of at least 125% of the NEC Table 430.248 FLC (not the motor nameplate, and not the calculated running current). As a reference formula against the table value: 40 A × 1.25. The specific conductor is picked from NEC Table 310.16 at the applicable termination temperature column, with ambient and bundling adjustments applied by the installer. Motor branches are exempt from the 240.4(D) small-conductor rule via 240.4(G).
Locked-rotor (startup) current typically runs 5-7 times the NEC Table 430.248 FLC for a squirrel-cage induction motor: 200-280 A for 2-5 seconds. The exact value depends on the NEMA code letter stamped on the motor nameplate.
This calculator provides estimates for reference purposes only. Always consult a licensed electrician and verify compliance with the National Electrical Code (NEC) and local electrical codes before performing any electrical work.