Calculate AWG wire gauge, diameter, resistance, ampacity, and voltage drop. Size conductors for electrical circuits with NEC compliance checks.
Choosing the correct wire gauge prevents overheating, fire hazards, and excessive voltage drop. The Wire Gauge Calculator helps you select the right AWG (American Wire Gauge) size based on current load, circuit length, and allowable voltage drop — following NEC (National Electrical Code) ampacity requirements. It is a practical check against undersizing a run that looks acceptable at first glance.
AWG is the standard wire sizing system in North America, where smaller numbers mean larger wire. AWG 14 (15A residential circuits), AWG 12 (20A circuits), AWG 10 (30A dryer/AC), and AWG 6 (50A range/EV charger) cover most household needs. For industrial and commercial applications, AWG 4/0 through 500 MCM handle heavy loads.
This calculator provides wire diameter, cross-sectional area, resistance per foot, ampacity for different insulation types, and voltage drop for any circuit length. It handles both copper and aluminum conductors, supports single-phase and three-phase calculations, and flags NEC code violations — essential for electricians, engineers, and DIY homeowners.
Use this calculator when you need to size conductors for current, distance, and voltage-drop limits instead of guessing from a chart. It is useful for residential runs, equipment feeds, and any circuit where safety and performance both matter. It also helps explain when voltage drop, not ampacity, is what forces a larger conductor.
Wire Diameter: d(in) = 0.005 × 92^((36-AWG)/39). Resistance: R = ρ × L / A (Ω/1000ft from NEC tables). Voltage Drop: Vd = 2 × I × R × L / 1000 (single phase). Ampacity per NEC Table 310.16.
Result: Recommended: AWG 10 (voltage drop: 2.4%, NEC ampacity: 30A)
A 20A circuit at 120V running 75 feet one-way needs AWG 10 copper wire to keep voltage drop under 3%. AWG 12 has 3.2% drop (over the 3% target). AWG 10 has NEC ampacity of 30A with 75°C insulation, well above the 20A load.
The American Wire Gauge system dates to 1857 and is based on the number of drawing dies the wire passes through. Starting from a 0.4600-inch rod (roughly AWG 4/0 or 0000), each die reduces diameter by a fixed ratio (approximately 1.123). After 39 dies, you reach AWG 36 at 0.005 inches.
Key relationships: every 3 gauge steps doubles the cross-sectional area. AWG 10 (10.38 mm²) has twice the area of AWG 13 (5.19 mm²). Every 6 gauge steps doubles the diameter. This geometric progression means AWG 0000 (4/0) is 107.2 mm² while AWG 40 is just 0.0079 mm².
NEC Table 310.16 lists ampacities for insulated conductors at 30°C ambient with no more than 3 current-carrying conductors. Real installations often need adjustments: more than 3 conductors in a raceway requires derating (Table 310.15(C)(1)). Ambient temperature above 30°C requires further derating. Continuous loads (3+ hours) require the conductor ampacity to be at least 125% of the load current.
For residential wiring, the most common configurations are: 15A circuits on AWG 14, 20A on AWG 12, 30A on AWG 10, 40A on AWG 8, and 50A on AWG 6 (all copper, 60°C termination).
Voltage drop becomes the controlling factor for long wire runs. The NEC recommendation of 3% branch circuit drop (5% total) is informational, not mandatory — but essential for proper equipment operation. Motors starting on circuits with high voltage drop may fail to start or overheat. LED drivers may flicker. Electronic equipment may malfunction.
For long runs, calculate voltage drop first, then verify NEC ampacity. The required gauge often needs to be 1-3 sizes larger than the NEC ampacity minimum. For example, a 20A circuit at 120V running 150 feet needs AWG 6 copper to stay under 3% drop, even though AWG 12 would be sufficient by ampacity alone.
NEC recommends (but doesn't require) max 3% voltage drop for branch circuits and 5% total (feeder + branch). A 120V circuit with 3% drop delivers 116.4V at the load. Excessive drop causes dim lights, motor overheating, and device malfunction. Long runs need larger wire to compensate.
Aluminum has 61% the conductivity of copper, so it needs to be about 2 AWG sizes larger for the same ampacity. Aluminum is lighter and cheaper per amp but requires special connectors (AL-CU rated), anti-oxidant compound, and careful torquing to prevent loose connections and fire risk.
For 50A at 240V (typical EV charger or range): AWG 6 copper or AWG 4 aluminum for runs up to 50 feet. For longer runs you may need AWG 4 copper to control voltage drop. Always check with local code.
AWG numbers decrease as wire gets larger. Each 3 AWG steps doubles the cross-sectional area and halves the resistance. Every 6 AWG steps doubles the diameter. AWG 0 (1/0) through 4/0 are the largest AWG sizes; above that, wire is measured in MCM (kcmil).
AWG 12 copper with 60°C insulation (TW): 20A. With 75°C (THWN): 25A. With 90°C (THHN): 30A. However, NEC limits 15A and 20A circuit wire sizing based on the overcurrent device, so AWG 12 on a 20A breaker is standard regardless of insulation rating.
Solid wire (AWG 14-10) is standard for permanent home wiring in conduit or NM cable. Stranded wire is more flexible, easier to pull through conduit in larger sizes, and required for sizes AWG 8 and larger in the NEC. Stranded also handles vibration better (automotive, machinery).