Selecting the correct copper busbar size and current rating is critical for safe, efficient power distribution. Whether you’re designing switchgear, solar inverter connections, or industrial motor control centers, this guide covers every key factor — from material properties and temperature rise to short circuit withstand — with a free built-in calculator to verify your sizing instantly.
A copper busbar is a flat or rectangular strip of high-conductivity copper used as a shared connection point for multiple electrical circuits. Found in switchgear, motor control centers, distribution panels, substations, and renewable energy systems, copper busbars carry high currents with minimal voltage drop while providing a reliable mechanical backbone for electrical connections.
Copper busbars are manufactured from Copper C11000 (electrolytic tough pitch) or C10200 (oxygen-free), achieving electrical conductivity of 100–101% IACS. Their flat geometry is not merely structural — it directly determines the current-carrying capacity by maximizing surface area for heat dissipation relative to conductor volume.
Unlike cables where insulation temperature limits dominate sizing, busbar size and current rating depends on surface heat dissipation — a complex interaction of geometry, mounting configuration, ambient temperature, and material properties.
| Property | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Electrical conductivity | 58 MS/m | vs 37 MS/m for aluminum |
| Density (C11000) | 8.9 g/cm³ | High mass, compact sizing |
| Max continuous temperature | 105 °C | Bare copper, open air |
| Typical current density | 1.2 A/mm² | Standard copper busbars |
The carrying capacity of a copper busbar is not simply a function of cross-sectional area. Heat dissipation governs the rating, and that depends on geometry, mounting configuration, ambient temperature, and installation environment.
As current flows through a busbar, I²R losses generate heat. The temperature rise (ΔT) above ambient determines how much current can flow safely. IEC 61439 limits temperature rise to 70°C above a 35°C ambient for bare copper conductors — giving a maximum surface temperature of 105°C. Connection points are typically limited to 85–95°C to protect plated contact surfaces over the system’s 25–30 year service life.
A thin, wide busbar dissipates more heat than a thick, narrow bar of identical cross-sectional area. A 100×10 mm bar has a perimeter-to-area ratio of 0.22 mm⁻¹, while a 50×20 mm bar (same 1,000 mm²) has only 0.14 mm⁻¹ — over 35% less cooling surface. This is why standard bus bars rarely exceed 20–25 mm in thickness; engineers add width or use multiple parallel bars instead.
The empirical thermal formula used for busbar current rating (IEC-referenced method):
I = K × A × (ΔT)^0.625 × (P/A)^0.5 × F_mount
Where:
K = 0.0435 (copper) | 0.0365 (aluminum)
A = Width × Thickness (mm²)
ΔT = T_max − T_ambient (°C)
P = 2 × (Width + Thickness) mm
F_mount = 1.0 horizontal | 0.85 vertical | 0.70 enclosed | Mounting Type | Factor (F_mount) | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|
| Horizontal flatway | 1.00 | Open cable trays, exposed busbars |
| Vertical edgewise | 0.85 | Vertical risers, panel interiors |
| Enclosed / switchgear | 0.70 | MCC, distribution boards, cubicles |
Standard rating tables assume 40°C ambient. For every 5°C increase in ambient temperature, derate busbar current capacity by approximately 3–5%. In outdoor tropical or desert installations where ambient may reach 50–55°C, derating is essential and must be accounted for explicitly in the design.
Above 1,000 m elevation, reduced air density impairs convective cooling. Apply a derating of approximately 0.4% per 100 m above 1,000 m. At 2,000 m this is roughly 4%; at 4,500 m — common in high-altitude mining — derating approaches 14%.
Both copper busbars and aluminum busbar systems are widely used in power distribution. The right choice depends on conductivity requirements, available space, structural constraints, and total installed cost.
| Property | Copper Busbar | Aluminum Busbar |
|---|---|---|
| Electrical conductivity | 58 MS/m (100% IACS) | 37 MS/m (~63% IACS) |
| Current density | 1.2 A/mm² | 0.8 A/mm² |
| Density | 8.9 g/cm³ | 2.7 g/cm³ |
| Cross-section for same current | Baseline | ~56% larger required |
| Weight for same current capacity | Heavier | ~48% lighter |
| Material cost | Higher per kg | Lower per kg |
| Corrosion resistance | Excellent (bare) | Oxide layer — tin plating required at joints |
| Short circuit temp limit | 185°C (Ksc = 226) | 160°C (Ksc = 148) |
| Best applications | Compact switchgear, high-current panels | Long distribution runs, weight-critical systems |
For most switchgear and panel applications, copper busbars offer superior performance per unit volume — critical when enclosure space is limited. Aluminum busbar systems become economically viable in long, large-scale distribution runs where structural support costs and conductor weight matter more than cross-sectional efficiency.

Use the calculator below to find the continuous current-carrying capacity of a copper or aluminum busbar. Enter your busbar dimensions, ambient conditions, and mounting configuration to get an instant result.
Copper Busbar Current Rating Calculator
GRL Copper · Free Engineering Tool · IEC-Referenced Formula
Formula: I = K × A × (ΔT)⁰·⁶²⁵ × (P/A)⁰·⁵ × Fmount. K = 0.0435 (copper), 0.0365 (aluminum). Short circuit: Isc = (Ksc × A) / √t, Ksc = 226 (copper) / 148 (aluminum) at 1 second. For final designs, validate per IEC 61439 or applicable local standards with a qualified electrical engineer. GRL Copper busbars are manufactured to IEC 60028 conductivity standards.
Note: Results are engineering estimates based on the IEC-referenced empirical thermal formula. Final designs must be validated per IEC 61439 or applicable local standards by a qualified electrical engineer.
The table below lists standard copper busbar size and current rating values at 40°C ambient, 50°C temperature rise (90°C operating), horizontal mounting in still air — consistent with IEC / CDA reference conditions. Values are for single bars; apply derating factors for parallel bars or alternative mounting.
| Size (W×T mm) | Area (mm²) | Weight (kg/m) | DC Current (A) | AC 50/60 Hz (A) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20×3 | 60 | 0.53 | 93 | 90 |
| 25×3 | 75 | 0.67 | 116 | 113 |
| 30×3 | 90 | 0.80 | 140 | 136 |
| 50×3 | 150 | 1.34 | 233 | 226 |
| 25×5 | 125 | 1.11 | 194 | 188 |
| 30×5 | 150 | 1.34 | 233 | 226 |
| 40×5 | 200 | 1.78 | 310 | 301 |
| 50×5 | 250 | 2.23 | 388 | 376 |
| 100×5 | 500 | 4.45 | 775 | 752 |
| 25×6 | 150 | 1.34 | 233 | 226 |
| 30×6 | 180 | 1.60 | 279 | 271 |
| 40×6 | 240 | 2.14 | 372 | 361 |
| 50×6 | 300 | 2.67 | 465 | 451 |
| 75×6 | 450 | 4.01 | 698 | 677 |
| 100×6 | 600 | 5.34 | 930 | 902 |
| 125×6 | 750 | 6.68 | 1,163 | 1,128 |
| 150×6 | 900 | 8.01 | 1,395 | 1,353 |
| 30×10 | 300 | 2.67 | 465 | 451 |
| 40×10 | 400 | 3.56 | 620 | 601 |
| 50×10 | 500 | 4.45 | 775 | 752 |
| 60×10 | 600 | 5.34 | 930 | 902 |
| 75×10 | 750 | 6.68 | 1,163 | 1,128 |
| 80×10 | 800 | 7.12 | 1,240 | 1,203 |
| 100×10 | 1,000 | 8.90 | 1,550 | 1,504 |
| 120×10 | 1,200 | 10.68 | 1,860 | 1,804 |
| 125×10 | 1,250 | 11.13 | 1,938 | 1,880 |
| 150×10 | 1,500 | 13.35 | 2,325 | 2,255 |
| 160×10 | 1,600 | 14.24 | 2,480 | 2,405 |
| 50×12 | 600 | 5.34 | 930 | 902 |
| 75×12 | 900 | 8.01 | 1,395 | 1,353 |
| 100×12 | 1,200 | 10.68 | 1,860 | 1,804 |
| 125×12 | 1,500 | 13.35 | 2,325 | 2,255 |
| 100×15 | 1,500 | 13.35 | 2,325 | 2,255 |
Source: Adapted from CDA/copper.org ampacity reference tables. Bare copper No.110, emissivity 0.4, 40°C ambient, 50°C temperature rise. Multiply by 0.85 for vertical edgewise; 0.70 for enclosed switchgear. AC values account for ~3% skin effect resistance increase at 50/60 Hz.
During short circuit events, fault current heats the busbar adiabatically — heat generated by I²R has no time to dissipate. The short circuit withstand formula is:
I_sc = (K_sc × A) / √t
Where:
K_sc = 226 for copper (40°C → 185°C)
K_sc = 148 for aluminum (40°C → 160°C)
A = Cross-sectional area (mm²)
t = Fault clearing time (seconds)
Valid for: 0.01 s < t < 3 s The inverse square-root relationship with time is critical for protection coordination. A copper busbar rated for 50 kA at 1 second can withstand 70.7 kA at 0.5 seconds — and only 35.4 kA at 2 seconds. This makes upstream breaker clearing time a key variable in busbar design.
| Busbar Size | Area (mm²) | Isc @ 0.5 sec (kA) | Isc @ 1 sec (kA) | Isc @ 3 sec (kA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50×6 mm | 300 | 95.8 | 67.8 | 39.2 |
| 100×6 mm | 600 | 191.5 | 135.6 | 78.3 |
| 100×10 mm | 1,000 | 319.2 | 226.0 | 130.5 |
| 150×10 mm | 1,500 | 478.8 | 339.0 | 195.8 |
| 200×10 mm | 2,000 | 638.4 | 452.0 | 261.0 |
IEC 61439 (which replaced IEC 60439) is the primary international standard governing low-voltage switchgear and controlgear assemblies, including their busbar systems. Key requirements relevant to busbar sizing include:
GRL High Conductivity Copper Busbar
IEC 61439 Compliance for Copper Busbar Systems
A 100×10 mm copper busbar (1,000 mm²) in horizontal flatway mounting at 40°C ambient with a 50°C temperature rise carries approximately 1,550 A DC or 1,504 A at AC 50/60 Hz. For enclosed switchgear with 0.70 mounting factor, expect approximately 1,085 A continuous. With a 1.25× safety factor applied, the design current is approximately 1,240 A.
Divide the required current by 1.2 A/mm² (copper) or 0.8 A/mm² (aluminum) for an initial cross-section estimate. Select a standard width keeping thickness at 10–15 mm. Then verify using the thermal formula I = K × A × (ΔT)^0.625 × (P/A)^0.5 × F_mount. If the rating falls short, increase width or add parallel bars — not thickness. Apply your safety factor last.
Busbar current carrying capacity is governed by heat dissipation, not resistance alone. A 200×10 mm bar has a perimeter-to-area ratio of 0.21 mm⁻¹; a 50×40 mm bar of identical 2,000 mm² area has only 0.09 mm⁻¹ — a 2.3× difference in cooling surface. More surface means stronger natural convection and significantly more heat removed per degree of temperature rise. This is why industry-standard copper busbars rarely exceed 20–25 mm in thickness.
IEC 61439-1 specifies a maximum temperature rise of 70°C above 35°C ambient (105°C surface) for bare copper conductors. Bolted connection points are limited to 85°C surface temperature. Insulated sections are limited to 55°C rise. Busbars near combustible materials may require lower limits per local fire codes.
Harmonic currents from VFDs, switch-mode power supplies, and EV chargers increase effective busbar heating beyond fundamental-frequency calculations. At 15–25% THD, heating increases 8–15%. At 40% THD, additional heating reaches 25–35%. For installations with significant harmonic content, apply a harmonic load factor of 1.15–1.35× or increase conductor size and verify with thermal imaging at commissioning.
GRL Copper supplies copper busbars in C11000 (ETP, 99.9% Cu, 100% IACS) and C10200 (Oxygen-Free, 99.95% Cu, 101% IACS). Standard dimensions from 3×10 mm through 15×150 mm and beyond, with custom cross-sections, lengths, punching patterns, and surface treatments (bare, tin-plated, silver-plated). Full material test certificates (MTC) to EN 10204 3.1 standard are available. Contact our team at GRL Copper for stock availability and custom quotations.
Need a custom copper busbar specification? GRL Copper manufactures C11000 and C10200 copper busbars to your exact dimensions, platings, and punching patterns — with full material certifications and fast delivery. Request a quote at GRL Copper →