Can I use a single 20-amp breaker for a bathroom and adjacent small bedroom in my basement?












2














I am in the process of wiring my basement.
1. Main area
2. Hallway
3. Small Bath
4. Small Bedroom with egress window.



I have a single 15-amp and 20-amp wire coming in from the electrical panel located in the garage.



Based on my reading I should use 12-2 Romex for all the outlets (even though the builder only use 15-amp for the new construction ). Then use 14-2 Romex for any lighting? Is this true?



So, I guess my real question is do I actually need a single circuit for the bathroom or can I share the circuit with bathroom and bedroom.










share|improve this question


















  • 3




    The bathroom receptacle must be on a 20-A circuit, and maybe it's allowed to power the entire bathroom (receptacle, lights, heat lamp, exhaust fan) on one 20-A circuit. But the circuit powering the bathroom receptacle cannot power anything outside the bathroom. So if you have one 15-A circuit and one 20-circuit going to the basement (and you don't want to add another circuit), then the 15-A circuit would have to power all the receptacles and lights in the bedroom. It is not against code to have bedroom receptacles on a 15-A circuit, but don't if you know that high draw appliances will be used.
    – Jim Stewart
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:03










  • @JimStewart a 20A outlet is required in Kitchens, but I don't beleive the NEC requires 20A for a bathroom? 15 is the minimum.
    – noybman
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:32






  • 2




    @noybman -- see NEC 210.11(C)(3) -- the branch circuit must be 20A even if the receptacles aren't.
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:34






  • 3




    Bathroom, laundry, kitchen all require 20 amp, Jim that comment should be an answer.
    – Ed Beal
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:41










  • Got it, I misread
    – noybman
    Dec 23 '18 at 0:54
















2














I am in the process of wiring my basement.
1. Main area
2. Hallway
3. Small Bath
4. Small Bedroom with egress window.



I have a single 15-amp and 20-amp wire coming in from the electrical panel located in the garage.



Based on my reading I should use 12-2 Romex for all the outlets (even though the builder only use 15-amp for the new construction ). Then use 14-2 Romex for any lighting? Is this true?



So, I guess my real question is do I actually need a single circuit for the bathroom or can I share the circuit with bathroom and bedroom.










share|improve this question


















  • 3




    The bathroom receptacle must be on a 20-A circuit, and maybe it's allowed to power the entire bathroom (receptacle, lights, heat lamp, exhaust fan) on one 20-A circuit. But the circuit powering the bathroom receptacle cannot power anything outside the bathroom. So if you have one 15-A circuit and one 20-circuit going to the basement (and you don't want to add another circuit), then the 15-A circuit would have to power all the receptacles and lights in the bedroom. It is not against code to have bedroom receptacles on a 15-A circuit, but don't if you know that high draw appliances will be used.
    – Jim Stewart
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:03










  • @JimStewart a 20A outlet is required in Kitchens, but I don't beleive the NEC requires 20A for a bathroom? 15 is the minimum.
    – noybman
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:32






  • 2




    @noybman -- see NEC 210.11(C)(3) -- the branch circuit must be 20A even if the receptacles aren't.
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:34






  • 3




    Bathroom, laundry, kitchen all require 20 amp, Jim that comment should be an answer.
    – Ed Beal
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:41










  • Got it, I misread
    – noybman
    Dec 23 '18 at 0:54














2












2








2







I am in the process of wiring my basement.
1. Main area
2. Hallway
3. Small Bath
4. Small Bedroom with egress window.



I have a single 15-amp and 20-amp wire coming in from the electrical panel located in the garage.



Based on my reading I should use 12-2 Romex for all the outlets (even though the builder only use 15-amp for the new construction ). Then use 14-2 Romex for any lighting? Is this true?



So, I guess my real question is do I actually need a single circuit for the bathroom or can I share the circuit with bathroom and bedroom.










share|improve this question













I am in the process of wiring my basement.
1. Main area
2. Hallway
3. Small Bath
4. Small Bedroom with egress window.



I have a single 15-amp and 20-amp wire coming in from the electrical panel located in the garage.



Based on my reading I should use 12-2 Romex for all the outlets (even though the builder only use 15-amp for the new construction ). Then use 14-2 Romex for any lighting? Is this true?



So, I guess my real question is do I actually need a single circuit for the bathroom or can I share the circuit with bathroom and bedroom.







wiring






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 22 '18 at 15:21









Christopher Lond

668




668








  • 3




    The bathroom receptacle must be on a 20-A circuit, and maybe it's allowed to power the entire bathroom (receptacle, lights, heat lamp, exhaust fan) on one 20-A circuit. But the circuit powering the bathroom receptacle cannot power anything outside the bathroom. So if you have one 15-A circuit and one 20-circuit going to the basement (and you don't want to add another circuit), then the 15-A circuit would have to power all the receptacles and lights in the bedroom. It is not against code to have bedroom receptacles on a 15-A circuit, but don't if you know that high draw appliances will be used.
    – Jim Stewart
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:03










  • @JimStewart a 20A outlet is required in Kitchens, but I don't beleive the NEC requires 20A for a bathroom? 15 is the minimum.
    – noybman
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:32






  • 2




    @noybman -- see NEC 210.11(C)(3) -- the branch circuit must be 20A even if the receptacles aren't.
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:34






  • 3




    Bathroom, laundry, kitchen all require 20 amp, Jim that comment should be an answer.
    – Ed Beal
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:41










  • Got it, I misread
    – noybman
    Dec 23 '18 at 0:54














  • 3




    The bathroom receptacle must be on a 20-A circuit, and maybe it's allowed to power the entire bathroom (receptacle, lights, heat lamp, exhaust fan) on one 20-A circuit. But the circuit powering the bathroom receptacle cannot power anything outside the bathroom. So if you have one 15-A circuit and one 20-circuit going to the basement (and you don't want to add another circuit), then the 15-A circuit would have to power all the receptacles and lights in the bedroom. It is not against code to have bedroom receptacles on a 15-A circuit, but don't if you know that high draw appliances will be used.
    – Jim Stewart
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:03










  • @JimStewart a 20A outlet is required in Kitchens, but I don't beleive the NEC requires 20A for a bathroom? 15 is the minimum.
    – noybman
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:32






  • 2




    @noybman -- see NEC 210.11(C)(3) -- the branch circuit must be 20A even if the receptacles aren't.
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:34






  • 3




    Bathroom, laundry, kitchen all require 20 amp, Jim that comment should be an answer.
    – Ed Beal
    Dec 22 '18 at 16:41










  • Got it, I misread
    – noybman
    Dec 23 '18 at 0:54








3




3




The bathroom receptacle must be on a 20-A circuit, and maybe it's allowed to power the entire bathroom (receptacle, lights, heat lamp, exhaust fan) on one 20-A circuit. But the circuit powering the bathroom receptacle cannot power anything outside the bathroom. So if you have one 15-A circuit and one 20-circuit going to the basement (and you don't want to add another circuit), then the 15-A circuit would have to power all the receptacles and lights in the bedroom. It is not against code to have bedroom receptacles on a 15-A circuit, but don't if you know that high draw appliances will be used.
– Jim Stewart
Dec 22 '18 at 16:03




The bathroom receptacle must be on a 20-A circuit, and maybe it's allowed to power the entire bathroom (receptacle, lights, heat lamp, exhaust fan) on one 20-A circuit. But the circuit powering the bathroom receptacle cannot power anything outside the bathroom. So if you have one 15-A circuit and one 20-circuit going to the basement (and you don't want to add another circuit), then the 15-A circuit would have to power all the receptacles and lights in the bedroom. It is not against code to have bedroom receptacles on a 15-A circuit, but don't if you know that high draw appliances will be used.
– Jim Stewart
Dec 22 '18 at 16:03












@JimStewart a 20A outlet is required in Kitchens, but I don't beleive the NEC requires 20A for a bathroom? 15 is the minimum.
– noybman
Dec 22 '18 at 16:32




@JimStewart a 20A outlet is required in Kitchens, but I don't beleive the NEC requires 20A for a bathroom? 15 is the minimum.
– noybman
Dec 22 '18 at 16:32




2




2




@noybman -- see NEC 210.11(C)(3) -- the branch circuit must be 20A even if the receptacles aren't.
– ThreePhaseEel
Dec 22 '18 at 16:34




@noybman -- see NEC 210.11(C)(3) -- the branch circuit must be 20A even if the receptacles aren't.
– ThreePhaseEel
Dec 22 '18 at 16:34




3




3




Bathroom, laundry, kitchen all require 20 amp, Jim that comment should be an answer.
– Ed Beal
Dec 22 '18 at 16:41




Bathroom, laundry, kitchen all require 20 amp, Jim that comment should be an answer.
– Ed Beal
Dec 22 '18 at 16:41












Got it, I misread
– noybman
Dec 23 '18 at 0:54




Got it, I misread
– noybman
Dec 23 '18 at 0:54










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















7














Nope, you'll need 2 circuits for this



Bathroom receptacles must be on a 20A branch circuit that is either dedicated to bathroom receptacles (and no other loads), or to the loads in a single bathroom (and no other rooms), as per NEC 210.11(C)(3):




(3) Bathroom Branch Circuits. In addition to the number of
branch circuits required by other parts of this section, at least
one 120-volt, 20-ampere branch circuit shall be provided to
supply the bathroom(s) receptacle outlet(s). Such circuits shall
have no other outlets.



Exception: Where the 20-ampere circuit supplies a single bathroom,
outlets for other equipment within the same bathroom shall be permitted
to be supplied in accordance with 210.23(A)(1) and (A)(2).




As a result, the 20A circuit will need to feed the bathroom receptacles (and possibly the rest of the bathroom's loads as well), while all other loads (general receptacles outside the bathroom, and lighting loads) will go on the remaining 15A circuit. All wiring on the 20A circuit will need to be 12AWG, as well.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Do you have any knowledge about the motivation for this rule? Obviously stating motivations has the downside that people think they can ignore a rule if it "doesn't apply", but assuming there is a good motivation, it would also create better understanding about safety aspects that might not be widely understood.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:29






  • 6




    @R.. -- primary reason is hairdryers, curlers, and other heavy-load heating appliances that are used in bathrooms :)
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:39






  • 7




    There is often more than one motivation, very common for a person to be told "the" motivation, go "hup, I don't care about that one" and ignore the other motivations which do in fact create a threat to their family.
    – Harper
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:43










  • @ThreePhaseEel: Right, but I'm wondering if there's some reason I'm missing why this is a safety matter rather than a convenience one. Maybe it's that if other stuff was on the circuit, use of hairdryers etc. tripping the breaker might prompt someone to plug in an extension cord from another circuit to power the hairdryer (creating risk of overloading the extension cord and risks from using in in a bathroom on a non-GFCI circuit)?
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:54






  • 3




    Indeed. It's not a big deal, but I find it useful to think about these things for understanding the intended safety properties. This line of discussion has reminded me that some safety rules are simply about not creating incentives for people to do stupid things.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:58











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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









7














Nope, you'll need 2 circuits for this



Bathroom receptacles must be on a 20A branch circuit that is either dedicated to bathroom receptacles (and no other loads), or to the loads in a single bathroom (and no other rooms), as per NEC 210.11(C)(3):




(3) Bathroom Branch Circuits. In addition to the number of
branch circuits required by other parts of this section, at least
one 120-volt, 20-ampere branch circuit shall be provided to
supply the bathroom(s) receptacle outlet(s). Such circuits shall
have no other outlets.



Exception: Where the 20-ampere circuit supplies a single bathroom,
outlets for other equipment within the same bathroom shall be permitted
to be supplied in accordance with 210.23(A)(1) and (A)(2).




As a result, the 20A circuit will need to feed the bathroom receptacles (and possibly the rest of the bathroom's loads as well), while all other loads (general receptacles outside the bathroom, and lighting loads) will go on the remaining 15A circuit. All wiring on the 20A circuit will need to be 12AWG, as well.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Do you have any knowledge about the motivation for this rule? Obviously stating motivations has the downside that people think they can ignore a rule if it "doesn't apply", but assuming there is a good motivation, it would also create better understanding about safety aspects that might not be widely understood.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:29






  • 6




    @R.. -- primary reason is hairdryers, curlers, and other heavy-load heating appliances that are used in bathrooms :)
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:39






  • 7




    There is often more than one motivation, very common for a person to be told "the" motivation, go "hup, I don't care about that one" and ignore the other motivations which do in fact create a threat to their family.
    – Harper
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:43










  • @ThreePhaseEel: Right, but I'm wondering if there's some reason I'm missing why this is a safety matter rather than a convenience one. Maybe it's that if other stuff was on the circuit, use of hairdryers etc. tripping the breaker might prompt someone to plug in an extension cord from another circuit to power the hairdryer (creating risk of overloading the extension cord and risks from using in in a bathroom on a non-GFCI circuit)?
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:54






  • 3




    Indeed. It's not a big deal, but I find it useful to think about these things for understanding the intended safety properties. This line of discussion has reminded me that some safety rules are simply about not creating incentives for people to do stupid things.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:58
















7














Nope, you'll need 2 circuits for this



Bathroom receptacles must be on a 20A branch circuit that is either dedicated to bathroom receptacles (and no other loads), or to the loads in a single bathroom (and no other rooms), as per NEC 210.11(C)(3):




(3) Bathroom Branch Circuits. In addition to the number of
branch circuits required by other parts of this section, at least
one 120-volt, 20-ampere branch circuit shall be provided to
supply the bathroom(s) receptacle outlet(s). Such circuits shall
have no other outlets.



Exception: Where the 20-ampere circuit supplies a single bathroom,
outlets for other equipment within the same bathroom shall be permitted
to be supplied in accordance with 210.23(A)(1) and (A)(2).




As a result, the 20A circuit will need to feed the bathroom receptacles (and possibly the rest of the bathroom's loads as well), while all other loads (general receptacles outside the bathroom, and lighting loads) will go on the remaining 15A circuit. All wiring on the 20A circuit will need to be 12AWG, as well.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Do you have any knowledge about the motivation for this rule? Obviously stating motivations has the downside that people think they can ignore a rule if it "doesn't apply", but assuming there is a good motivation, it would also create better understanding about safety aspects that might not be widely understood.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:29






  • 6




    @R.. -- primary reason is hairdryers, curlers, and other heavy-load heating appliances that are used in bathrooms :)
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:39






  • 7




    There is often more than one motivation, very common for a person to be told "the" motivation, go "hup, I don't care about that one" and ignore the other motivations which do in fact create a threat to their family.
    – Harper
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:43










  • @ThreePhaseEel: Right, but I'm wondering if there's some reason I'm missing why this is a safety matter rather than a convenience one. Maybe it's that if other stuff was on the circuit, use of hairdryers etc. tripping the breaker might prompt someone to plug in an extension cord from another circuit to power the hairdryer (creating risk of overloading the extension cord and risks from using in in a bathroom on a non-GFCI circuit)?
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:54






  • 3




    Indeed. It's not a big deal, but I find it useful to think about these things for understanding the intended safety properties. This line of discussion has reminded me that some safety rules are simply about not creating incentives for people to do stupid things.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:58














7












7








7






Nope, you'll need 2 circuits for this



Bathroom receptacles must be on a 20A branch circuit that is either dedicated to bathroom receptacles (and no other loads), or to the loads in a single bathroom (and no other rooms), as per NEC 210.11(C)(3):




(3) Bathroom Branch Circuits. In addition to the number of
branch circuits required by other parts of this section, at least
one 120-volt, 20-ampere branch circuit shall be provided to
supply the bathroom(s) receptacle outlet(s). Such circuits shall
have no other outlets.



Exception: Where the 20-ampere circuit supplies a single bathroom,
outlets for other equipment within the same bathroom shall be permitted
to be supplied in accordance with 210.23(A)(1) and (A)(2).




As a result, the 20A circuit will need to feed the bathroom receptacles (and possibly the rest of the bathroom's loads as well), while all other loads (general receptacles outside the bathroom, and lighting loads) will go on the remaining 15A circuit. All wiring on the 20A circuit will need to be 12AWG, as well.






share|improve this answer












Nope, you'll need 2 circuits for this



Bathroom receptacles must be on a 20A branch circuit that is either dedicated to bathroom receptacles (and no other loads), or to the loads in a single bathroom (and no other rooms), as per NEC 210.11(C)(3):




(3) Bathroom Branch Circuits. In addition to the number of
branch circuits required by other parts of this section, at least
one 120-volt, 20-ampere branch circuit shall be provided to
supply the bathroom(s) receptacle outlet(s). Such circuits shall
have no other outlets.



Exception: Where the 20-ampere circuit supplies a single bathroom,
outlets for other equipment within the same bathroom shall be permitted
to be supplied in accordance with 210.23(A)(1) and (A)(2).




As a result, the 20A circuit will need to feed the bathroom receptacles (and possibly the rest of the bathroom's loads as well), while all other loads (general receptacles outside the bathroom, and lighting loads) will go on the remaining 15A circuit. All wiring on the 20A circuit will need to be 12AWG, as well.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 22 '18 at 16:39









ThreePhaseEel

30.5k114791




30.5k114791








  • 3




    Do you have any knowledge about the motivation for this rule? Obviously stating motivations has the downside that people think they can ignore a rule if it "doesn't apply", but assuming there is a good motivation, it would also create better understanding about safety aspects that might not be widely understood.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:29






  • 6




    @R.. -- primary reason is hairdryers, curlers, and other heavy-load heating appliances that are used in bathrooms :)
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:39






  • 7




    There is often more than one motivation, very common for a person to be told "the" motivation, go "hup, I don't care about that one" and ignore the other motivations which do in fact create a threat to their family.
    – Harper
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:43










  • @ThreePhaseEel: Right, but I'm wondering if there's some reason I'm missing why this is a safety matter rather than a convenience one. Maybe it's that if other stuff was on the circuit, use of hairdryers etc. tripping the breaker might prompt someone to plug in an extension cord from another circuit to power the hairdryer (creating risk of overloading the extension cord and risks from using in in a bathroom on a non-GFCI circuit)?
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:54






  • 3




    Indeed. It's not a big deal, but I find it useful to think about these things for understanding the intended safety properties. This line of discussion has reminded me that some safety rules are simply about not creating incentives for people to do stupid things.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:58














  • 3




    Do you have any knowledge about the motivation for this rule? Obviously stating motivations has the downside that people think they can ignore a rule if it "doesn't apply", but assuming there is a good motivation, it would also create better understanding about safety aspects that might not be widely understood.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:29






  • 6




    @R.. -- primary reason is hairdryers, curlers, and other heavy-load heating appliances that are used in bathrooms :)
    – ThreePhaseEel
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:39






  • 7




    There is often more than one motivation, very common for a person to be told "the" motivation, go "hup, I don't care about that one" and ignore the other motivations which do in fact create a threat to their family.
    – Harper
    Dec 22 '18 at 17:43










  • @ThreePhaseEel: Right, but I'm wondering if there's some reason I'm missing why this is a safety matter rather than a convenience one. Maybe it's that if other stuff was on the circuit, use of hairdryers etc. tripping the breaker might prompt someone to plug in an extension cord from another circuit to power the hairdryer (creating risk of overloading the extension cord and risks from using in in a bathroom on a non-GFCI circuit)?
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:54






  • 3




    Indeed. It's not a big deal, but I find it useful to think about these things for understanding the intended safety properties. This line of discussion has reminded me that some safety rules are simply about not creating incentives for people to do stupid things.
    – R..
    Dec 22 '18 at 18:58








3




3




Do you have any knowledge about the motivation for this rule? Obviously stating motivations has the downside that people think they can ignore a rule if it "doesn't apply", but assuming there is a good motivation, it would also create better understanding about safety aspects that might not be widely understood.
– R..
Dec 22 '18 at 17:29




Do you have any knowledge about the motivation for this rule? Obviously stating motivations has the downside that people think they can ignore a rule if it "doesn't apply", but assuming there is a good motivation, it would also create better understanding about safety aspects that might not be widely understood.
– R..
Dec 22 '18 at 17:29




6




6




@R.. -- primary reason is hairdryers, curlers, and other heavy-load heating appliances that are used in bathrooms :)
– ThreePhaseEel
Dec 22 '18 at 17:39




@R.. -- primary reason is hairdryers, curlers, and other heavy-load heating appliances that are used in bathrooms :)
– ThreePhaseEel
Dec 22 '18 at 17:39




7




7




There is often more than one motivation, very common for a person to be told "the" motivation, go "hup, I don't care about that one" and ignore the other motivations which do in fact create a threat to their family.
– Harper
Dec 22 '18 at 17:43




There is often more than one motivation, very common for a person to be told "the" motivation, go "hup, I don't care about that one" and ignore the other motivations which do in fact create a threat to their family.
– Harper
Dec 22 '18 at 17:43












@ThreePhaseEel: Right, but I'm wondering if there's some reason I'm missing why this is a safety matter rather than a convenience one. Maybe it's that if other stuff was on the circuit, use of hairdryers etc. tripping the breaker might prompt someone to plug in an extension cord from another circuit to power the hairdryer (creating risk of overloading the extension cord and risks from using in in a bathroom on a non-GFCI circuit)?
– R..
Dec 22 '18 at 18:54




@ThreePhaseEel: Right, but I'm wondering if there's some reason I'm missing why this is a safety matter rather than a convenience one. Maybe it's that if other stuff was on the circuit, use of hairdryers etc. tripping the breaker might prompt someone to plug in an extension cord from another circuit to power the hairdryer (creating risk of overloading the extension cord and risks from using in in a bathroom on a non-GFCI circuit)?
– R..
Dec 22 '18 at 18:54




3




3




Indeed. It's not a big deal, but I find it useful to think about these things for understanding the intended safety properties. This line of discussion has reminded me that some safety rules are simply about not creating incentives for people to do stupid things.
– R..
Dec 22 '18 at 18:58




Indeed. It's not a big deal, but I find it useful to think about these things for understanding the intended safety properties. This line of discussion has reminded me that some safety rules are simply about not creating incentives for people to do stupid things.
– R..
Dec 22 '18 at 18:58


















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