When tackling the question of whether multiple circuits can share a junction box, the answer is yes, it is permissible under certain conditions. Can I have 2 sources of power (From 2 different panels) going into the same electrical box? Both 120/240V. Only if you label the box that there are 2 sources of power. The design of residential electrical systems permits a specific exception to this rule, allowing two separate 120-volt circuits to share a single neutral. There are three circuits entering the box, but it appears that two circuits are sharing a single neutral. Everything appears to work (and has done so for 2+ years), but I'm curious if this is ok from a code point of view. Sorry with this being extra long but I wanted to provide all information I could think of for those folks that can answer. Original homeowner in a '92 tract home that. Junction boxes typically have one line and splice into parallel using one line and one neutral from home run, so what is this code about no longer being able to share neutral? Junction boxes typically have one line and splice into parallel using one line and one neutral from home run, so what is.
[PDF Version]