How Many Amps Does a 7.5 HP three-phase Motor Draw at 240V?
A 7.5 HP three-phase motor at 240V draws approximately 18.63 amps per line during normal operation (85% efficiency, PF 0.85). Startup current can be 5-7 times the NEC Table 430.250 FLC (110-154 A) for a few seconds, which affects breaker and wire sizing.
Use this citation when referencing this page.
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 (three-phase)
I(A) = (HP × 746) ÷ (√3 × VL-L × Eff × PF)
- Convert HP to watts: 7.5 × 746 = 5,595W
- Denominator: √3 × 240 × 0.85 × 0.85 = 1.73 × 240 × 0.85 × 0.85 = 300.34
- Result: 5,595 ÷ 300.34 = 18.63 amps per line
Three-phase current is per line on a balanced circuit. Voltage is line-to-line; the √3 factor comes from the three-phase vector geometry, not a round-trip doubling.
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 430.250 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 three-phase motor at 240V, the table value is 22 A (the 230V column covers 220-240V under 430.6(A)(1)).
The 18.63 A shown in the hero is the calculated running current at 85% efficiency and PF 0.85, per line on a balanced three-phase circuit. 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 22 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 430.250 value: 22 × 1.25 = 27.5 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 Type | Maximum % of Table FLC (430.52(C)(1)) |
|---|---|
| Non-time-delay fuse | 300% |
| Dual-element (time-delay) fuse | 175% |
| Inverse-time circuit breaker | 250% |
| Instantaneous-trip circuit breaker | 800% |
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 430.250 FLC of 22 A (roughly 110 to 154 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.
| Current | Amps | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Calculated running current (meter) | 18.63 A per line | Continuous at full load |
| NEC Table 430.250 FLC (Code reference) | 22 A | Sizing base, not metered |
| Locked rotor (typical, 5-7×) | 110-154 A | 2-5 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 (three-phase)
Motor efficiency directly affects amp draw. A more efficient motor draws less current for the same HP output. Values below are the calculated three-phase running current at 240V per line and PF 0.85:
| Efficiency | Amps at 240V (per line) | Watts Consumed | Waste Heat |
|---|---|---|---|
| 75% | 21.11 A | 7,460 W | 1,865 W |
| 80% | 19.79 A | 6,993.75 W | 1,398.75 W |
| 85% | 18.63 A | 6,582.35 W | 987.35 W |
| 90% | 17.59 A | 6,216.67 W | 621.67 W |
| 95% | 16.67 A | 5,889.47 W | 294.47 W |
Other HP Values at 240V (three-phase)
Running current is the calculated three-phase draw per line 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 430.250 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 three-phase mode.
| HP | Running Amps (calculated) | NEC Table 430.250 FLC | LRA Estimate (5-7× FLC) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/8 HP | 0.3105 A | off-table | n/a |
| 1/6 HP | 0.4141 A | off-table | n/a |
| 1/4 HP | 0.621 A | off-table | n/a |
| 1/3 HP | 0.8279 A | off-table | n/a |
| 1/2 HP | 1.24 A | 2.2 A | 11-15.4 A |
| 3/4 HP | 1.86 A | 3.2 A | 16-22.4 A |
| 1 HP | 2.48 A | 4.2 A | 21-29.4 A |
| 1.5 HP | 3.73 A | 6 A | 30-42 A |
| 2 HP | 4.97 A | 6.8 A | 34-47.6 A |
| 3 HP | 7.45 A | 9.6 A | 48-67.2 A |
| 5 HP | 12.42 A | 15.2 A | 76-106.4 A |
| 7.5 HP | 18.63 A | 22 A | 110-154 A |
| 10 HP | 24.84 A | 28 A | 140-196 A |
| 15 HP | 37.26 A | 42 A | 210-294 A |
| 20 HP | 49.68 A | 54 A | 270-378 A |
| 25 HP | 62.1 A | 68 A | 340-476 A |
| 30 HP | 74.52 A | 80 A | 400-560 A |
| 40 HP | 99.35 A | 104 A | 520-728 A |
| 50 HP | 124.19 A | 130 A | 650-910 A |
| 75 HP | 186.29 A | 192 A | 960-1,344 A |