What Size Circuit Breaker for Well Pump

Most residential well pumps (½ HP to 1½ HP, 240V) require a 20A to 30A double-pole breaker. But if you use that answer alone, you risk nuisance tripping, undersized wiring, and costly pump failures. The correct breaker size depends on the pump’s horsepower, voltage (120V vs. 240V), wire type, run length, and NEC motor protection rules.

This guide covers every pump configuration — from a small ½ HP shallow-well unit to a heavy-duty 3 HP submersible — with complete amperage charts, wire sizing tables, NEC 2026 motor circuit rules, and a step-by-step diagnostic flowchart for breakers that keep tripping.

Well pumps are motor loads, and NEC 430 requires breakers sized at 125–250% of the motor’s full-load amperage — NOT the standard 125% rule used for other appliances. Using the wrong sizing method is the single most common cause of well pump breaker failures.

Well Pump Breaker Size Chart (All HP Ratings)

This is the complete reference table for selecting the correct double-pole breaker for 240V well pumps — the most common residential configuration.

Pump HP Full-Load Amps (240V) Minimum Breaker Recommended Breaker Wire Gauge (Copper)
½ HP 5.0A 15A 15A–20A 14 AWG
¾ HP 6.9A 15A 20A 12 AWG
1 HP 8.0A 15A 20A 12 AWG
1½ HP 10.0A 20A 20A–25A 12 AWG
2 HP 12.0A 20A 25A–30A 10 AWG
3 HP 17.0A 30A 30A–40A 10 AWG
5 HP 28.0A 40A 50A 8 AWG
These values assume 240V single-phase pumps at sea level in 60°F ambient temperature. Always verify against the motor nameplate before purchasing a breaker.

Quick Reference: Most Common Residential Well Pumps

  • ½ HP Submersible Well Pump (240V): 15A double-pole breaker, 14 AWG wire
  • 1 HP Submersible Well Pump (240V): 20A double-pole breaker, 12 AWG wire
  • 1½ HP Submersible Well Pump (240V): 20A–25A double-pole breaker, 12 AWG wire
  • ½ HP Shallow Well Pump (120V): 15A single-pole breaker, 14 AWG wire

How to Calculate the Right Breaker Size

Well pumps are classified as motor loads under NEC Article 430. The calculation method is different from standard appliance circuits.

Step 1: Find the Full-Load Amperage (FLA)

Check the motor nameplate on your pump or pressure switch housing. The nameplate lists the voltage, horsepower (HP), Full-Load Amperage (FLA or RLA), and Service Factor (SF). If the nameplate is unreadable, use NEC Table 430.248 values — which are what the chart above reflects.

Step 2: Apply the NEC 430 Motor Protection Rule

NEC 430.52 allows the overcurrent protective device (breaker) to be sized up to 250% of the motor’s FLA for inverse time breakers. This accounts for motor inrush current at startup, which can be 6–8x the running amperage.

The Formula: Maximum breaker size = FLA × 2.5 (round down to next standard size)

Example — 1 HP Well Pump (240V, 8.0A FLA):
8.0A × 2.5 = 20A → Use 20A double-pole breaker

Example — ½ HP Well Pump (240V, 5.0A FLA):
5.0A × 2.5 = 12.5A → Use 15A double-pole breaker (next standard size)

Step 3: Verify Wire Ampacity

The wire gauge must be sized for the motor’s FLA at 125%, per NEC 430.22. For a 1 HP pump at 8A FLA: 8 × 1.25 = 10A minimum. 12 AWG is strongly recommended for all well pump circuits due to voltage drop over long underground runs.

Step 4: Check for Voltage Drop on Long Runs

Underground well pump wiring often runs 50–200 feet. Excessive voltage drop causes motor overheating and breaker tripping. Use this sizing guide:

Run Length (One Way) ½ HP (240V) 1 HP (240V) 2 HP (240V)
Up to 100 ft 14 AWG 12 AWG 10 AWG
100–200 ft 12 AWG 10 AWG 8 AWG
200–300 ft 10 AWG 8 AWG 6 AWG

120V vs. 240V Well Pumps: Which Do You Have?

A common question: are well pumps 110 or 220? The answer depends on pump size and age.

120V Well Pumps

Primarily ½ HP and smaller. Shallow well jet pumps and small above-ground pumps. Common in older homes (pre-1980) and low-demand applications.

Breaker type: Single-pole 15A or 20A

240V Well Pumps

All submersible pumps and all pumps ¾ HP and above. The standard for modern residential and agricultural well systems.

Breaker type: Double-pole 15A–30A (size per HP)

How to tell which voltage your pump uses: Check the nameplate on the pressure switch or pump itself. A rating of 115V/120V = single-pole breaker; 230V/240V = double-pole breaker.

All submersible well pumps must be on a dedicated circuit. Never share a well pump circuit with other loads — the motor’s startup inrush current (6–8x running amperage) will trip shared circuits and cause voltage sags that harm other appliances.

Wire Size for Well Pump Circuits

Above-Ground Wiring (Panel to Pressure Tank)

Use Type NM-B (Romex) or THWN-2 in conduit for above-ground runs:

  • ½ HP (240V): 14/2 AWG with ground
  • 1 HP (240V): 12/2 AWG with ground
  • 2 HP (240V): 10/2 AWG with ground
  • 3 HP (240V): 10/2 AWG with ground (verify voltage drop for long runs)

Underground Wiring (Panel to Well Head)

Use UF-B (Underground Feeder) cable or THWN-2 in conduit. Per NEC 300.5, must be buried at minimum 24 inches deep (direct burial) or 12 inches in conduit, with protection where exiting the ground.

Drop Cable (Inside the Well Casing)

Submersible pump drop cable is specifically rated for continuous water submersion and should never be substituted with standard wire:

  • 2-wire + ground: Most ½ HP and 1 HP pumps
  • 3-wire + ground: 1½ HP and larger with a separate control box

Wire gauge for drop cable follows the same ampacity rules but should be sized one gauge heavier than the minimum due to temperature derating in water.

Using standard NM-B (Romex) cable for underground well pump wiring is a code violation and fire hazard. NM-B is not rated for wet or underground locations. Always use UF-B direct burial cable or conductors in weatherproof conduit.

Well Pump Amperage by HP: Full Reference Table

This comprehensive amperage reference covers both 120V and 240V single-phase pumps using NEC Table 430.248 values.

Pump HP 120V FLA 120V Breaker 240V FLA 240V Breaker Wire (Short Run) Wire (Long Run)
¼ HP 5.8A 15A 2.9A 15A 14 AWG 12 AWG
⅓ HP 7.2A 15A 3.6A 15A 14 AWG 12 AWG
½ HP 9.8A 15A 4.9A 15A 14 AWG 12 AWG
¾ HP 13.8A 20A 6.9A 15A–20A 12 AWG 10 AWG
1 HP 16.0A 25A 8.0A 15A–20A 12 AWG 10 AWG
1½ HP 20.0A 30A 10.0A 20A 12 AWG 10 AWG
2 HP 24.0A 35A 12.0A 20A–25A 10 AWG 8 AWG
3 HP 34.0A 50A 17.0A 30A 10 AWG 8 AWG

Common Amperage Questions — Quick Answers

½ HP Well Pump Amps

At 240V: approximately 4.9–5.0A running. Startup inrush: 25–35A for 0.2–0.5 seconds. Use a 15A double-pole breaker.

1 HP Well Pump Amps

At 240V: approximately 8.0A running. Startup inrush: 40–60A for a fraction of a second. Use a 20A double-pole breaker.

1½ HP Well Pump Amps

At 240V: approximately 10.0A running. A 20A breaker handles this comfortably with proper wire sizing.

¾ HP Well Pump Amps

At 240V: approximately 6.9A running. Use a 15A–20A double-pole breaker. 20A preferred for startup headroom.

For detailed guidance on motor-specific sizing calculations, see our complete resource on how to size a circuit breaker for a motor.

NEC 2026 Motor Circuit Rules for Well Pumps

Well pumps fall under NEC Article 430 (Motors, Motor Circuits, and Controllers). Key 2026 requirements that affect every well pump installation:

NEC Section Rule Practical Impact
430.22 Conductors must be rated at ≥ 125% of motor FLA A 1 HP pump at 8A needs wire rated for 10A minimum
430.52 Breaker may be up to 250% of FLA for inverse time breakers Allows for startup inrush without nuisance tripping
430.32 Separate overload protection required at 115–125% FLA Built into well pump control box or pressure switch
300.5 Underground cables must be buried 24″ (direct) or 12″ (conduit) All wiring from panel to well head must meet depth requirements
NEC 680 GFCI required in wet locations as defined by NEC 2026 Check with local AHJ for specific pump circuit requirements

NEC 430.32 — Motor Overload Protection: Well pump circuits require a separate overload protection device at 115% of FLA for motors with a 1.15 service factor (SF), or 125% of FLA for motors with less than 1.15 SF. This is typically built into the well pump control box or pressure switch assembly — it is NOT the same as the branch circuit breaker.

Well Pump Breaker Tripping: Diagnostic Guide

A well pump that keeps tripping its circuit breaker is one of the most common residential electrical service calls. Follow this systematic diagnostic process:

WELL PUMP BREAKER TRIPPING
          │
          ▼
Does it trip immediately on reset?
          │
     YES  │                    NO
          ▼                    ▼
   Short circuit          Does it trip during
   in pump motor          normal operation?
   or wiring                    │
   → Call electrician      YES  │          NO
                                ▼          ▼
                        Does it trip    Trips only at
                        at startup?    certain times?
                            │               │
                        YES │           YES │
                            ▼               ▼
                     Motor inrush    Check ambient
                     too high for    temp, shared
                     breaker size    loads, voltage
                     → Increase      → Evaluate
                     to 250% FLA     upgrade
        

Cause 1: Worn or Damaged Pump Motor

The most common cause of a well pump tripping its breaker is a failing submersible motor. As windings degrade, they draw excessive current. Symptoms: Breaker trips within minutes of reset, motor overheats, water pressure is lower than normal.

Cause 2: Breaker Undersized for Startup Inrush

If someone replaced the original breaker with a smaller size, or if the pump was upgraded to a larger HP without a breaker upgrade, startup inrush will trip the breaker. Fix: Verify size per NEC 430.52 (up to 250% of FLA) and replace if needed.

Cause 3: Grounded Motor Windings (Water Intrusion)

If water enters the motor housing, it grounds the windings, causing immediate breaker trips. Test: Using a megohmmeter (Megger), measure resistance from each pump lead to ground. Below 1 megohm indicates ground fault — replace the pump.

Cause 4: Aged Circuit Breaker

Double-pole breakers for well pumps should be tested every 5–10 years. A breaker’s thermal element loses calibration over time and may trip at 70–80% of its rated value. Replacement is the only fix.

Cause 5: Voltage Drop Causing Overcurrent

Long wiring runs create voltage drop. Lower voltage causes the motor to draw higher current to maintain power output. If a pump runs on undersized wire over 200+ feet, current draw can exceed the breaker’s trip point. Fix: Upsize wire gauge.

For a complete guide to all the reasons a breaker keeps tripping, see our in-depth article on what causes a circuit breaker to keep tripping.

2-Wire vs. 3-Wire Submersible Pumps

Understanding your submersible pump’s wiring configuration determines the control box requirements and installation complexity.

2-Wire Submersible Pump

Most common for ½–1 HP. 2 power conductors + bare copper ground. Motor starting capacitor is built into the motor. No separate control box required.

Typical wiring path:
Panel → double-pole breaker → pressure switch → 2-wire + ground drop cable → pump motor

3-Wire Submersible Pump

Most common for 1½–5 HP. 3 power conductors + ground running to a separate above-ground control box. Start and run capacitors are accessible above ground.

Typical wiring path:
Panel → double-pole breaker → control box → 3-wire + ground drop cable → pump motor

Does 2-wire vs. 3-wire affect breaker size? No. Breaker sizing is based on the motor’s HP and FLA, not the wiring configuration. A 1 HP 2-wire pump and a 1 HP 3-wire pump use the same breaker size: 20A double-pole.

Well Pump Electrical Box & Control Panel

The “well pump electrical box” or “well pump breaker box” refers to the dedicated disconnect and protection assembly near the pressure tank. Here’s what it typically contains:

Standard Well Pump Electrical Box Components

  • Double-Pole Breaker (or Fused Disconnect): The main overcurrent protection device, sized per NEC 430.52. This is what most homeowners call the “well pump breaker.”
  • Pressure Switch: The automatic controller that starts and stops the pump based on pressure tank readings (typically 40/60 PSI or 30/50 PSI). Contains terminals for the power wires.
  • Control Box (3-Wire Systems): Houses starting and run capacitors for 3-wire submersible motors. Must be matched to the exact pump HP and voltage.
  • Overload Relay: Provides motor overload protection per NEC 430.32. On modern systems this is built into the control box.

Voltage Requirements Summary

Component 120V System 240V System
Breaker Single-pole 15A–20A Double-pole 15A–30A
Wiring 2-conductor + ground 2-conductor + ground
Pressure Switch 120V rated 240V rated
Control Box 120V (if applicable) 240V (if applicable)

DVOLT MCB Solutions for Well Pump Applications

For well pump circuits requiring reliable, UL-compliant miniature circuit breakers with motor-grade protection characteristics, the NP1-63DC Miniature Circuit Breaker from DVOLT provides precision trip characteristics essential for motor protection applications. For standard residential 240V well pump circuits, browse the complete DVOLT MCB product range — available in 6A to 63A ratings in single and double-pole configurations ideal for pump panel integration.

Professional Testing Protocols for Well Pump Circuits

Test 1: Motor Insulation Resistance (Megger Test)

Using a 500V megohmmeter, test resistance from each pump lead to ground:

  • Above 100 megohms: Motor windings are healthy
  • 10–100 megohms: Monitor closely, plan for replacement
  • Below 1 megohm: Ground fault — replace pump motor

Test 2: Current Draw Verification

Use a clamp meter on the pump circuit during startup and running:

  • Startup inrush: Acceptable up to 6–8x FLA for under 1 second
  • Running current: Should be within 5% of nameplate FLA
  • Current more than 15% above FLA: Investigate pump wear, voltage drop, or low voltage

Test 3: Voltage at Pump Terminals

Measure 240V at the pressure switch terminals while the pump is running:

  • Should read 228–252V (±5% of nominal 240V)
  • Below 220V: Voltage drop problem — upsize wire or check utility voltage
  • Below 210V: Severe problem — pump will overheat and fail prematurely

Test 4: Capacitor Test (3-Wire Systems)

A failed start or run capacitor is the #1 mechanical cause of well pump failures. Test with a capacitance meter — value should be within 10% of the rating printed on the capacitor housing. A shorted or open capacitor causes immediate motor overload and trips the breaker.

Well Pump Electrical Upgrade Checklist

  • 📋 Identify pump HP and voltage from nameplate before buying any parts
  • Verify breaker is double-pole for any 240V pump
  • 📏 Check wire gauge from panel to pressure switch and down the well
  • 🔍 Perform megohmmeter test on pump motor if breaker is tripping
  • 🌡️ Measure running amperage with clamp meter — compare to nameplate FLA
  • 🔋 Test capacitors if your pump has a 3-wire control box
  • 📐 Calculate voltage drop for runs over 100 feet
  • 📞 Contact a licensed electrician for any panel work or underground wiring

FAQ: Well Pump Circuit Breaker Sizing

❓ What size breaker for a ½ HP well pump?

For a ½ HP, 240V submersible well pump drawing 4.9–5.0A FLA, use a 15A double-pole breaker with 14 AWG wire. If the run is over 100 feet, use 12 AWG wire to prevent voltage drop issues.

❓ What size breaker for a 1 HP well pump?

For a 1 HP, 240V well pump drawing 8.0A FLA, use a 20A double-pole breaker with 12 AWG wire. NEC 430.52 allows up to 20A (8.0 × 2.5 = 20A exactly).

❓ What size breaker for a 1½ HP well pump?

For a 1½ HP, 240V pump drawing 10.0A FLA, use a 20A to 25A double-pole breaker. A 20A is code-compliant and sufficient for most installations; use 25A if the pump experiences nuisance tripping at startup.

❓ What size breaker for a ¾ HP well pump?

For a ¾ HP, 240V pump drawing 6.9A FLA, use a 15A to 20A double-pole breaker. 15A is the minimum; 20A is preferred to handle startup inrush without tripping on older or higher-inertia systems.

❓ Are well pumps 110 or 220 volts?

Most modern submersible well pumps — including most ½ HP and all larger pumps — operate at 240V (220–230V). Small above-ground jet pumps and shallow-well pumps may run at 120V. The pump nameplate provides the definitive answer.

❓ How many amps does a 240V well pump draw?

At 240V, well pump amperage ranges from approximately 5A (½ HP) to 17A (3 HP) at running load. Startup inrush can be 6–8 times these values for a fraction of a second. Always use the nameplate running amperage for breaker and wire sizing calculations.

❓ Can a well pump share a circuit breaker with other appliances?

No. NEC 422.12 and standard practice require well pumps to be on dedicated circuits. The motor’s startup inrush current causes voltage sags that damage other appliances, and a shared circuit creates reliability problems for your water supply.

❓ Why does my well pump keep tripping the circuit breaker?

The most common causes in order: (1) failing pump motor drawing excessive current, (2) breaker undersized or aged beyond calibration, (3) grounded motor windings from water intrusion, (4) failed capacitor in the control box, (5) voltage drop from undersized wire causing overcurrent. Start diagnosis by measuring running amperage with a clamp meter.

❓ Does a well pump need a GFCI breaker?

Under NEC 2026, GFCI protection is required for well pump circuits installed in wet locations per NEC 680. For most standard residential well installations, GFCI is not required on the pump circuit itself. Check with your local authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) for specific requirements in your area.

❓ What size wire do I need for a 240V well pump?

Minimum wire sizes: 14 AWG for ½ HP (short runs under 100 ft), 12 AWG for ¾ HP to 1½ HP, 10 AWG for 2–3 HP. For runs over 100 feet, upsize one gauge. All underground wiring must be UF-B or THWN-2 in conduit — never standard NM-B (Romex).

Get the Right Breaker for Your Well Pump

Correct breaker selection for a well pump protects your investment, ensures NEC 2026 compliance, and prevents the costly failures that come from undersized or oversized overcurrent protection. DVOLT offers a complete range of single and double-pole MCBs engineered for motor load applications — all UL-listed and ready for residential or commercial pump panel installation.

Precision MCB Breakers for Well Pump Circuits

UL-listed, NEC 2026 compliant — single and double-pole from 6A to 63A. Built for motor load protection.

Browse MCB Breakers Talk to a Specialist View All Products
“The breaker protecting your well pump is also protecting your motor, your wiring, and your water supply. Size it right the first time.”

DVOLT Electrical — Precision Low Voltage Solutions

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