Confusion abounds over the use of tandem circuit breakers in panelboards, even among electricians and electrical inspectors. Today I’ll set the record straight as to when tandem circuit breakers can be used. This is an adaptation of an article I wrote for the ASHI Reporter, which was published in February of 2011. Our fully licensed emergency electricians offer fast and reliable electrician Brisbane 24 hours services for your home or business.
First, a quick definition. A tandem circuit breaker is a double circuit breaker that takes up the space of a single circuit breaker on a panelboard. You’ll also hear them called duplex, slimline, twin, half-height, half-inch, double and wafer breakers, depending on local customs. While a two-pole circuit breaker gets connected to two different poles at a panelboard and has a common trip or a handle tie for simultaneous disconnecting of two poles, a tandem breaker does not.
The photo below shows a 60 amp two-pole circuit breaker at the top, then a 15 amp tandem circuit breaker (highlighted), then a 20 amp tandem circuit breaker (highlighted), then a 20 amp single-pole circuit breaker at the bottom.
Because tandem circuit breakers allow for two circuits to be installed on a panelboard in a one circuit breaker space, they’re typically used after a panelboard has been filled to capacity with standard circuit breakers. Because of this, they’re often referred to as “cheaters.”
Is this really ‘cheating’? No, it’s not. The use of tandem circuit breakers is a perfectly acceptable practice, as long as the panelboard is designed for tandem circuit breakers and they’re installed in locations within the panelboard where they’re allowed.
How does a home inspector determine whether tandem circuit breakers are allowed on the panelboard they’re inspecting? There are a number of ways to do so.
Class CTL Panelboards
Panelboards must follow UL Standard 67, which requires all lighting and appliance panelboards to be Class CTL (Circuit Total Limiting). Here’s an old formula for determining how many circuits are allowed in the Class CTL panelboard being inspected; this formula is helpful to use when inspecting older electric panels without clear labeling inside the panel. Take the amperage of the panelboard, multiply by the number of poles, and divide by 10. It sounds complicated, but it’s not — let’s use a 100-amp panelboard as an example:
Based on this formula, the maximum number of circuits allowed in a 100-amp 120/240-volt panelboard is 20. For panelboards not manufactured as “lighting & appliance” panelboards, there is no limit to the number of circuit breakers allowed. This formula is also no longer applicable for today’s panels.
The 2008 National Electrical Code (NEC) makes it a little confusing. Previous editions of the NEC limited the maximum number of circuits in a lighting and appliance panelboard to 42. The 2008 version of the NEC removed the “lighting & appliance” panelboard designation, however, NEC 408.54 says “A panelboard shall be provided with physical means to prevent the installation of more overcurrent devices than that number for which the panelboard was designed, rated, and listed.”
Manufacturers still list the maximum number of circuit breakers allowed, and must provide a rejection feature to help prevent the use of tandem circuit breakers where not allowed.
Class CTL panelboards have different methods of preventing class CTL tandem circuit breakers from being used in locations where they’re not allowed. This is referred to as a “rejection feature”. In the photo below, the highlighted bus stabs are notched to allow the use of tandem circuit breakers; the bus stabs which don’t have this notch won’t allow tandem breakers.
Class CTL tandem circuit breakers have a different shape than standard single pole circuit breakers, to help prevent them from being installed where they don’t belong.
Tandem circuit breakers are manufactured this way in an effort to prevent people from using them in an improper manner – but this doesn’t stop everyone. In the photos below, you can see how someone broke the bottoms of the circuit breakers to make them fit where they didn’t belong. This is probably where the term “cheater” comes from.
For panelboards manufactured before adoption of the Class CTL standard, non-Class CTL tandem circuit breakers are allowed to be installed as replacement circuit breakers only. Non-Class CTL tandem circuit breakers do not have the ‘rejection’ feature that Class CTL breakers have. As clearly indicated by the label on the side of the circuit breaker pictured below, these circuit breakers are not allowed in ClassCTLpanelboards. The difficulty for home inspectors is that the marking is not usually visible after installation, and home inspectors aren’t supposed to pull out circuit breakers to try to figure this stuff out.