Fault Current (Short-Circuit) Calculator

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Fault Current (Short-Circuit) Calculator

The available short-circuit current at a transformer secondary — the number that sets the interrupting rating (AIC) your breakers and panel must meet. From the transformer kVA, voltage and impedance.

Available fault current

The Current You Hope Never Flows

Normal load current is what runs your equipment. Fault current is what surges when a short circuit dead-shorts the system — often tens of thousands of amps in the first instant. Every protective device has to interrupt that surge safely. If the available fault current exceeds a breaker interrupting rating, the breaker can explode instead of trip. That is why this one number drives equipment selection.

ISC = IFLA × (100 / %Z)

The transformer full-load current times 100 divided by its percent impedance gives the bolted-fault current at the secondary terminals. A 500 kVA, 480 V transformer at 5.75 percent impedance delivers about 10,000 A — roughly seventeen times its full-load rating.

Why Impedance Is Your Friend

The percent impedance %Z is the brake on fault current: a higher-impedance transformer limits how much current a short circuit can draw, while a low-impedance transformer lets more through. It is a trade-off — lower impedance means better voltage regulation but higher fault duty on the downstream gear.

Interrupting Rating (AIC)

A breaker has two ratings: the continuous current it carries, and the interrupting rating (AIC, amps interrupting capacity) — the largest fault it can safely break. Pick devices whose AIC meets or beats the available fault current. The calculator rounds up to the next standard rating (10, 14, 22, 25, 35, 65 kA and so on).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the infinite-primary assumption?

It treats the utility as an unlimited source, so all the limiting comes from the transformer. That gives the maximum possible secondary fault current – a safe, conservative basis for rating equipment.

Is the real fault current always lower?

Downstream, yes – cable and connection impedance reduce it with distance. But large motors briefly feed current into a fault, which a detailed study adds back in.

Where do I get %Z?

From the transformer nameplate or test report. Typical dry-type and liquid transformers run around 4 to 6 percent.

For education and preliminary estimating only. Real short-circuit coordination studies use the utility available fault current, conductor and motor contributions, and must follow the applicable code (NEC 110.9, 110.10) by a qualified engineer. Never rely on this figure alone to rate equipment.
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The calculators and tools on Formula Factory are provided for general guidance and informational purposes only. Results are estimates based on standard formulas and the values you enter — they do not constitute professional engineering, electrical, or architectural advice. Always verify calculations with a qualified professional before making decisions for any safety-critical, code-compliance, or commercial application. Formula Factory makes no representations or warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of any result, and accepts no liability for errors, omissions, or any outcomes arising from reliance on this information.