Voltage Drop Calculator

Calculate voltage drop over wire distance for single-phase and three-phase circuits. Find minimum wire gauge to meet NEC 3% recommendation, estimate power loss, and annual energy cost of voltage drop.

A
ft
Voltage Drop
Voltage Drop %
NEC Compliance (< 3%)
Voltage at Load
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
A
ft
Voltage Drop
Voltage Drop %
Voltage at Load
NEC 3% Check
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail
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ft
°F
$
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Voltage Drop
Voltage Drop %
Voltage at Load
NEC 210.19 Compliance
Power Loss in Wire
Annual Energy Loss
Annual Cost of Voltage Drop
Temperature Correction Note

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select your system voltage (120V for most residential outlets, 240V for appliances).
  2. Enter the load current in amps (from the device nameplate or breaker size).
  3. Enter the one-way distance from the panel to the load in feet.
  4. Select the wire gauge (AWG) you plan to use.
  5. See voltage drop in volts and percent, and whether it meets NEC recommendations.
  6. Use Three Phase tab for 3-phase circuits (commercial/industrial).
  7. Use Minimum Wire Size tab to find the smallest acceptable wire gauge for your run.

Formula

Single Phase: VD = I × R × 2 × Distance ÷ 1000 (R in Ω/1000ft)

Three Phase: VD = √3 × I × R × Distance ÷ 1000

Voltage Drop % = (VD ÷ Source Voltage) × 100

Example

120V circuit, 20A load, 100ft run, #12 AWG copper (1.98 Ω/1000ft). Total length = 200ft. R = 1.98 × 200÷1000 = 0.396 Ω. VD = 20 × 0.396 = 7.92V. Drop % = 7.92÷120 = 6.6% — exceeds 3%. Use #10 AWG (1.24 Ω/1000ft) → VD = 4.96V = 4.1%. Use #8 AWG for 2.6%.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • NEC 210.19(A) recommends voltage drop not exceed 3% for branch circuits and 5% for the combined feeder and branch circuit. This is a recommendation, not a hard code requirement for most applications, but it's the industry standard for acceptable power quality.
  • Single Phase: VD = 2 × K × I × D / CM. Or using resistance: VD = I × R, where R = conductor resistance (Ω/1000ft) × total length ÷ 1000. Three phase: VD = √3 × I × R × D. K = 12.9 for copper, 21.2 for aluminum at 75°C.
  • Use this calculator to find the minimum wire size for your run. As a quick rule: upgrade one gauge size for every 50–75 feet beyond 100 feet on a 120V circuit. For a 200-foot run with a 20A load on 120V, #10 AWG is often needed where #12 would suffice at 100 feet.
  • Yes — aluminum has about 61% more electrical resistance than copper of the same gauge. For aluminum wire, multiply resistance values by 1.61. To match copper performance, aluminum must be two wire sizes larger: #12 copper ≈ #8 aluminum in resistance.
  • Three-phase voltage drop uses the formula: VD = √3 × I × R × one-way-distance. The √3 factor (≈1.732) accounts for the phase relationship. Three-phase systems are more efficient for long runs because they deliver more power with less voltage drop than single-phase systems of the same wire size.

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