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Voltage Drop Calculator per BS 7671 for Commercial Buildings

BS 767118th Edition + Amendment 2:2022Commercial Buildings

Commercial building voltage drop calculations under BS 7671 must account for cascaded distribution boards where the total drop is cumulative from the main switchboard. Appendix 4, Table 4Ab permits 3% for lighting and 5% for other uses. Sub-main feeders often dominate the overall voltage drop budget in multi-storey buildings.

Quick Reference Table

BS 7671 Voltage Drop Parameters — CommercialBS 7671 (18th Edition + Amendment 2:2022)
ParameterValue / RequirementClause Reference
Lighting circuits3% maximum (6.9 V at 230 V)Appendix 4, Table 4Ab
Power circuits5% maximum (11.5 V at 230 V / 20 V at 400 V)Appendix 4, Table 4Ab
Permissible drop scopeOrigin of installation to current-using equipmentRegulation 525.1
Three-phase mV/A/m valuesPer conductor CSA and installation methodTable 4D1B, Column 4
Busbar trunking systemsManufacturer's declared voltage drop per metreRegulation 525.2
Motor starting transientShort-duration voltage dip excluded from steady-state assessmentRegulation 525.1 Note

How to Calculate Voltage Drop for Commercial Buildings

  1. 1

    Map the distribution architecture

    Identify the path from the main switchboard through sub-distribution boards to the final circuit. Commercial buildings often have 2-3 levels of distribution, and voltage drop accumulates at each stage.

  2. 2

    Allocate voltage drop budget per stage

    Divide the total permissible voltage drop (e.g. 11.5 V for power at 230 V) between the sub-main feeder and final circuits. A common split is 60% for the sub-main and 40% for final circuits.

  3. 3

    Calculate sub-main feeder voltage drop

    Using the maximum demand current and cable route length, apply VD = (mV/A/m × Ib × L) / 1000 with three-phase values from Table 4D1B Column 4 for 400 V feeders.

  4. 4

    Calculate final circuit voltage drops

    For each final circuit from the sub-distribution board, compute the voltage drop independently. The total drop at the load is the sum of the sub-main and final circuit drops.

  5. 5

    Verify cumulative drop at worst-case outlet

    Identify the circuit with the longest run and highest load. Confirm the total voltage drop from the main switchboard to this point stays within the Table 4Ab limit.

  6. 6

    Consider busbar trunking alternatives

    For risers in multi-storey commercial buildings, busbar trunking may offer lower voltage drop per metre than cables. Use the manufacturer's declared values per Regulation 525.2.

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BS 7671 vs IEC 60364 Cable Sizing Comparison

ParameterBS 7671IEC 60364
ScopeUK & derivativesInternational (adopted by 60+ countries)
Voltage drop limit3% lighting / 5% other4% lighting / 5% other (typical)
Reference ambient temp30°C (air), 20°C (ground)30°C (air), 20°C (ground)
Installation methodsReference Methods A-G (Appendix 4)Reference Methods A-G (Table B.52.1)
Grouping factorsTable C.3 (BS specific)Table B.52.17 (international)
Disconnection time (230V)0.4s final / 5s distribution0.4s final / 5s distribution

Frequently Asked Questions

BS 7671 does not prescribe a specific split — the only requirement is that the total drop from origin to load does not exceed the Table 4Ab limit. In practice, designers typically allocate 60-70% of the budget to the sub-main feeder (which is longer) and 30-40% to the final circuit. For a 5% power limit at 400 V three-phase, this means roughly 12 V for the sub-main and 8 V for the final circuit.
The permissible percentage limits in Table 4Ab apply equally to single-phase and three-phase circuits. However, the absolute voltage is higher for three-phase (5% of 400 V = 20 V line-to-line). Use the three-phase mV/A/m column in Table 4D1B for balanced loads. For unbalanced three-phase circuits, calculate the worst-case phase individually.
Yes. Over-sizing the sub-main feeder reduces its voltage drop contribution, leaving more headroom for final circuits. This is common in commercial fit-outs where tenant loads may change. The cost of one larger sub-main cable is often less than upsizing dozens of final circuits.

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