Voltage Drop Calculator
Voltage drop analysis per AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017. Select a cable size and verify voltage drop compliance.
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Voltage drop is the reduction in electrical potential along a conductor caused by its impedance when current flows through it. IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 525 limits permissible voltage drop to ensure equipment operates within rated tolerances. It is calculated using the formula Vd equals mV per amp per metre multiplied by design current and cable length.
How to Calculate Voltage Drop
- 1Gather circuit parameters — Record the design current in amperes, cable length in metres, supply voltage, number of phases, and the power factor of the load. These are the inputs required for the voltage drop formula.
- 2Find the mV/A/m value — Look up the millivolt drop per ampere per metre from the cable manufacturer's data or standard tables. This value depends on conductor size, material, and whether the circuit is AC or DC.[IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 525]
- 3Apply the voltage drop formula — Calculate Vd = (mV/A/m x Ib x L) / 1000 for single-phase, using the single-phase mV/A/m value. For three-phase balanced loads, use the three-phase mV/A/m value with the same formula (Vd = mV/A/m x Ib x L / 1000) — these values already account for the phase relationship. The result is in volts.
- 4Convert to percentage — Express the voltage drop as a percentage of the nominal supply voltage: Vd% = (Vd / Vnom) x 100. This allows direct comparison against the allowable limit for the installation.
- 5Compare against allowable limit — Check the result against the applicable standard limit. BS 7671 and IEC 60364 typically allow 5% total, while NEC recommends 3% for branch circuits and 5% total for feeder plus branch combined.[BS 7671 Regulation 525.1]
How Voltage Drop Works
The voltage drop calculator determines the voltage loss along a cable run and verifies it falls within the permissible limits defined by the applicable standard.
Voltage drop is calculated using the formula Vd = (mV/A/m x Ib x L) / 1000, where mV/A/m is the millivolt drop per ampere per metre (from cable manufacturer data or standard tables), Ib is the design current in amperes, and L is the one-way cable route length in metres. For three-phase circuits, the formula uses three-phase mV/A/m values directly; for single-phase circuits, the single-phase mV/A/m values apply.
The mV/A/m values account for both resistive and reactive components of the cable impedance. At higher power factors, the resistive component dominates, while at lower power factors the reactive component becomes significant — particularly for larger conductor sizes. AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 provides these values in Tables 35-42 for various conductor and insulation types.
Each standard specifies different permissible limits. BS 7671:2018+A2 Regulation 525.1 recommends a maximum of 3% for lighting circuits and 5% for other circuits from the origin of the installation. IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 525 provides similar guidance. NEC/NFPA 70:2023 Section 210.19(A) Informational Note No. 4 recommends 3% for branch circuits and 5% total (feeder plus branch circuit), though these are advisory rather than mandatory. AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 Clause 4.5 limits the total voltage drop to 5% from the point of supply.
Where voltage drop exceeds limits, the calculator recommends the next cable size up. The results display the voltage at the load end, percentage drop, comparison against the standard limit, and a breakdown of resistive versus reactive voltage drop components. For long runs or heavily loaded circuits, voltage drop often governs cable selection over current carrying capacity alone.
Maximum Permissible Voltage Drop by Standard
| Standard | Lighting | Other Circuits | Total Limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| BS 7671 | 3% | 5% | From origin |
| IEC 60364 | 4% | 5% | From distribution board |
| NEC (NFPA 70) | 3% (recommended) | 3% branch | 5% total |
| AS/NZS 3008 | 5% | 5% | From point of supply |
Source: BS 7671 Appendix 12, IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 525, NEC 210.19(A) Note 4, AS/NZS 3008.1.1 Clause 4.5
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the maximum voltage drop allowed per BS 7671?
How do you calculate voltage drop using the mV/A/m method?
What voltage drop limit does AS/NZS 3008.1.1 specify?
How does power factor affect voltage drop calculations?
What is the NEC voltage drop recommendation?
How do you account for cable length in a voltage drop calculation?
Is it true that at high power factor, a larger cable can produce more voltage drop than a smaller one on the same circuit?
AS/NZS 3008 allows 5% voltage drop from origin to final subcircuit, but BS 7671 gives 3% for lighting and 5% for other uses. What happens when both standards apply on the same international project?
Why does the voltage drop formula give incorrect results for long single-phase circuits with power-factor-corrected loads, and what adjustment is needed?
How does the diversity factor interact with voltage drop calculations for sub-distribution boards, and why does ignoring it cause oversized mains?
At what cable length does the voltage drop constraint, rather than current capacity, start governing the cable size, and why does this crossover point shift dramatically between standards?
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Standards Reference
- AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 — Clause 4.5, Tables 35-42
- BS 7671:2018+A2 — Regulation 525.1, Appendix 12
- IEC 60364-5-52 — Clause 525
- NEC/NFPA 70:2023 — Section 210.19(A), Chapter 9 Table 9