At a Glance
To choose the right current transformer (CT), follow these 5 key criteria: a transformation ratio (Ip/Is) immediately above the maximum current to be measured, a 5 A secondary if the distance to the meter is under 10 m (1 A beyond), a VA rating higher than the total burden of the measurement chain, an accuracy class suited to the application (0.2S–0.5 for tariff metering, 1 for industrial use, 5P/10P for protection), and a physical form factor compatible with your installation (wound, cable window or busbar type).
Why Is Current Transformer Selection Critical?
A current transformer (CT) is a fundamental component in any electrical measurement or protection chain. It converts a high primary current into a proportional, lower secondary current that can be safely used by meters, energy counters and protection relays.
A poorly sized CT leads to direct consequences:
- Measurement errors that can distort billing or energy monitoring data.
- Nuisance tripping or failure to trip of protection devices.
- Core saturation rendering readings unusable above a certain threshold.
- Regulatory non-compliance for tariff metering (MID directive, utility requirements).
Step 1 — Determine the Primary Rated Current (Ip)
1Identify the maximum current you need to measure on your installation. The transformation ratio must be the next standard rating above this current.
Practical Example
Maximum measured current on the feeder: 1,103 A. Available standard ratios are 1000/5 and 1250/5. Choose the 1250/5 CT since 1250 > 1103.
| Measured Current (A) | Recommended CT Ratio |
|---|---|
| 0 – 40 | 50/5 (wound CT recommended) |
| 40 – 75 | 75/5 or 100/5 |
| 75 – 100 | 100/5 |
| 100 – 150 | 150/5 or 200/5 |
| 150 – 250 | 250/5 |
| 250 – 400 | 400/5 |
| 400 – 600 | 600/5 |
| 600 – 800 | 800/5 |
| 800 – 1,200 | 1250/5 |
| 1,200 – 1,600 | 1600/5 |
Step 2 — Choose the Secondary Current: 1 A or 5 A
2The CT secondary feeds the measuring or protection instruments. Two standards exist:
| Criterion | 5 A Secondary | 1 A Secondary |
|---|---|---|
| CT-to-instrument distance | ≤ 10 metres | > 10 metres |
| Cable losses | Higher (I² × R) | 25 times lower |
| Cable cross-section | Larger required | Smaller sufficient |
| Typical use | Sub-distribution boards, close proximity | Main switchboards, long distances, substations |
| Compatibility | Most instruments | Check instrument compatibility |
Step 3 — Calculate the Required Burden (VA)
3The CT's VA rating must cover the total burden of everything connected to the secondary:
- Instrument burden (meter, relay, ammeter…) — check their datasheets.
- Cable burden: Pcable = R × I² (where R depends on cross-section and length).
Calculation Example
Energy meter: 0.5 VA + Protection relay: 1 VA + Cabling (15 m in 2.5 mm², Is = 5 A): ≈ 2.7 VA → Total = 4.2 VA → Choice: 5 VA CT (next standard rating).
Step 4 — Select the Accuracy Class
4The accuracy class defines the maximum allowable error. It must match your application:
| Class | Max. Error | Application |
|---|---|---|
| 0.1 | ± 0.1% | Calibration, metrology laboratory |
| 0.2 / 0.2S | ± 0.2% | High-precision tariff metering |
| 0.5 / 0.5S | ± 0.5% | Tariff metering, MID-certified sub-metering |
| 1 | ± 1% | Industrial sub-metering, energy monitoring |
| 3 | ± 3% | Indicative display, simple monitoring |
| 5P / 10P | ± 5% / ± 10% | Protection (overcurrent relays, earth fault) |
⚠️ Accuracy at Low Loads
The smaller the CT ratio relative to the actual current being measured, the less accurate the reading. For reliable measurements with digital instruments, prefer a slightly higher ratio. Example: to measure 40 A, a 100/5 CT will be more accurate than a 50/5 at low load.
Step 5 — Choose the CT Type for Your Installation
5The physical form factor depends on the current to be measured, the conductor type and the available space:
| CT Type | Current Range | Conductor | Advantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wound (closed core) | ≤ 40 A | Cable passed through CT | Very accurate, compact, affordable |
| Cable window | 50 – 4,000 A | Cable or busbar passed through | Easy installation, wide range |
| Busbar type | 100 – 6,000 A | Through busbar | Robust, suited for high currents |
| Split-core (opening) | 50 – 4,000 A | Cable or busbar | Retrofit without shutdown, maintenance |
| Rogowski coil | 1 – 10,000 A | Cable or busbar | Flexible, lightweight, no saturation |
Special Case: Sizing a CT for a Motor Circuit
Electric motors draw a starting current (Is) far higher than their rated current (In), typically 5 to 8 times In. To prevent CT saturation during transient phases:
Motor sizing rule:
CT primary Ip = Istarting / 2
Example
Motor with In = 85 A and Istarting = 510 A (factor of 6). Choose Ip = 510 / 2 = 255 A → 300/5 CT (next standard rating).
Standards and Safety for Current Transformers
Current transformers must comply with applicable international standards:
- IEC 61869-1: general requirements for instrument transformers.
- IEC 61869-2: specific requirements for current transformers.
- EN 50463: for railway applications.
- MID Directive (2014/32/EU): for regulated tariff metering.
⚠️ Critical Safety Warning
The secondary of an energised CT must never be left open-circuited. Before any work, short-circuit the secondary terminals or use a dedicated shorting terminal block. An open secondary generates dangerous voltages that can reach several kilovolts.
Choose recognised and certified manufacturers: Schneider Electric, Socomec, CIRCUTOR, Chauvin Arnoux, IME, Eastron or WAGO for DIN-rail solutions.
Summary Table: Choose Your CT in 6 Criteria
| Criterion | Recommendation | Common Mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Primary current (Ip) | Next standard ratio above maximum current | Choosing a ratio too close → saturation |
| Secondary current (Is) | 5 A if distance < 10 m, 1 A if > 10 m | 5 A over long distance → excessive losses |
| Burden (VA) | ≥ total burden (instruments + cabling) | Forgetting cable losses → undersizing |
| Accuracy class | 0.5S for metering, 1 for industrial, 5P for protection | Class too low for tariff metering |
| Physical type | Wound < 40 A, cable/busbar > 150 A, split-core for retrofit | Closed core for retrofit → shutdown required |
| Motor circuit | Ip = Istarting / 2 | Sizing on In → saturation at start-up |
Frequently Asked Questions — Current Transformers
Key Takeaways
- Choose a transformation ratio (Ip/Is) where the primary is the next standard rating above the maximum measured current.
- Use a 5 A secondary for short distances (< 10 m) and 1 A for long distances (> 10 m).
- Calculate the total burden (instruments + cabling) and select the next standard VA rating above it.
- Match the accuracy class to the application: 0.5S for tariff metering, 1 for industrial monitoring, 5P/10P for protection.
- Select the physical type based on your installation: wound (< 40 A), cable window/busbar (> 150 A), split-core for retrofits.
- For motor circuits, size on Ip = Istarting / 2 to avoid saturation.
- Never leave the secondary open while energised — always short-circuit before working on the circuit.











