EMT vs Rigid vs IMC Conduit: Complete Comparison for Electricians (2026)
Mar 22, 2026
EMT, rigid (RMC), and IMC each have distinct strengths and NEC requirements. This guide covers when to use each based on real installation scenarios.
Comparison
| Feature | EMT | IMC | Rigid |
|---|---|---|---|
| NEC article | 358 | 342 | 344 |
| Connection | Set screw / compression | Threaded | Threaded |
| Weight (1" x 10ft) | ~3 lbs | ~5.2 lbs | ~7.6 lbs |
| Outdoor | With compression fittings | Yes | Yes (most robust) |
| Cost | $ | $$ | $$$ |
EMT (NEC 358)
The workhorse. Lightweight, easy to bend, lowest cost. Uses set-screw or compression fittings (no threading). Best for indoor commercial walls/ceilings, exposed runs in garages, and most residential. EMT installs 2-3x faster than threaded conduit.
IMC (NEC 342)
Middle ground. Threaded like rigid but with thinner walls. Lighter and cheaper than rigid. Can substitute for rigid in almost all applications per NEC 342.10.
Rigid / RMC (NEC 344)
Heaviest, most robust. Best physical protection and grounding path. Default for service entrance, outdoor poles, areas subject to damage, hazardous locations, and utility work.
Recommendation
EMT with compression fittings for 80% of jobs. IMC when threaded connections needed without rigid's weight. Rigid for service entrance, outdoor utility, and industrial.
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