Voltage Drop Formula

On long wire runs, resistance causes the voltage to drop. This single-phase formula estimates the drop for a copper conductor.

VD = (2 × K × I × L) ÷ CM

What the terms mean

Symbol Meaning
VD Voltage drop, in volts
K Resistivity (about 12.9 for copper)
I Current, in amperes
L One-way length, in feet
CM Conductor area, in circular mils

Worked example

20 A over 100 ft of 12 AWG (6,530 CM) copper: (2 × 12.9 × 20 × 100) ÷ 6,530 = about 7.9 V, or 6.6% on 120 V.

Keep it under 3%. Branch circuits should hold voltage drop to about 3%. Past that, step up a wire gauge to lower resistance.

See the Power Formula and Voltage Drop Calculator.

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