Home/Tools/Voltage Drop Calculator

Voltage Drop Calculator

Volts dropped and percent drop on copper or aluminum conductors, single- or three-phase. Flags the 3% / 5% NEC informational thresholds.

Voltage drop
— %
Voltage at load
V
Status (NEC informational)
Suggested upsize
// Ad slot — fills after AdSense approval

How voltage drop is calculated

Conductors have resistance. When current flows through them, some of the source voltage gets used up heating the wire instead of reaching the load. The classic formula uses K (resistivity expressed in ohms per circular-mil-foot) and circular-mil area:

Single phase: VD = (2 × K × I × L) / CM Three phase: VD = (√3 × K × I × L) / CM % drop = VD / V_source × 100

NEC informational guidance

Voltage drop isn't a code requirement in most cases — it's strongly recommended in two informational notes:

Exceptions where 5% / 3% becomes mandatory: sensitive electronics, fire pumps (NEC 695.7 — 5% max during starting), and some industrial control applications. For most residential and commercial work, treat 5% as the hard limit and 3% as the target.

Quick mental shortcuts

Frequently asked questions

What's the voltage drop formula?
VD = (2 × K × I × L) / CM single-phase, or (√3 × K × I × L) / CM three-phase. K = 12.9 Cu, 21.2 Al at 75°C.
What does the NEC require for voltage drop?
It's recommendation, not requirement: 3% on the branch, 5% combined feeder+branch. Some applications (fire pumps, sensitive electronics) make it a hard limit.
How far can 12 AWG go?
About 60 ft one-way for a 20 A 120 V load before hitting 3%. Past that, jump to 10 AWG.
Why does aluminum drop more?
Resistivity is ~1.6× copper. Aluminum compensates by being one or two sizes larger for the same ampacity.
One-way or round trip length?
One way. The 2 (single phase) and √3 (three phase) in the formula handle the return.

Related tools