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The 4% Voltage Drop Rule Is Not a Universal Standard — Here's What Each Code Actually Says

The widely cited 4% voltage drop limit exists in no electrical standard. AS/NZS 3000 allows 5%, BS 7671 recommends 3%/5%, IEC defers to national annexes, and NEC 210.19 is informational only. A quick-reference comparison for engineers working across jurisdictions.

2 min readUpdated March 12, 2026
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Where the “4% Rule” Comes From

Ask ten electricians what the maximum voltage drop is, and at least six will say “4%.” It is repeated in training courses, rule-of-thumb guides, and contractor shorthand across the English-speaking world. The problem: no major wiring standard specifies 4% as a hard limit. It is a blended average of several different numbers from several different codes — none of which actually say 4%.

What Each Standard Actually Says

Here is the actual language from each code:

StandardVoltage Drop LimitReferenceStatus
AS/NZS 3000:20185% total (consumer mains + sub-mains + final sub-circuit)Clause 3.6.2Mandatory
BS 7671:2018+A23% lighting / 5% other (from origin to point of use)Appendix 4, Section 6.4Recommended, not regulation
IEC 60364-5-52Defers to national annex; suggests 3–5% in informative annexAnnex G (informative)Guidance only
NEC/NFPA 70:20233% branch circuit + 5% total210.19(A) Informational Note No. 4Not mandatory — informational note only

The NEC point is critical: the 3%/5% figures appear in an informational note, which per NFPA 70, Section 90.5(C) is “not enforceable as a requirement.” Yet entire cable schedules are designed to these numbers as if they were code. In the US, there is technically no NEC-mandated voltage drop limit — only equipment manufacturer requirements and engineering judgement.

Field note: At Batu Hijau, we ran 11 kV feeders over 4 km to the pit crusher. The IEC informative annex was irrelevant — we calculated voltage drop against motor starting requirements and transformer tap range. Standards give you a floor; your load tells you the ceiling.

Practical Takeaway

Stop citing “4%” as if it is a universal rule. Instead:

  • Know which standard governs your jurisdiction and cite the actual clause number.
  • Distinguish mandatory from advisory. AS/NZS 3000 Clause 3.6.2 is mandatory; NEC 210.19 Informational Note is not.
  • Calculate for the actual load. Motor starting, LED driver compatibility, and sensitive electronic equipment may impose tighter limits than any standard requires.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Not among the four major international standards (AS/NZS, BS, IEC, NEC). Some local utility connection agreements or specific industrial specifications may stipulate 4%, but these are contractual requirements, not code mandates. The 4% figure appears to be a rounded average of the various 3% and 5% numbers across different standards.
Where the limit is mandatory (AS/NZS 3000), exceeding it is a code violation and may fail inspection. Where the limit is advisory (BS 7671 Appendix 4, NEC informational notes), exceeding it is not a violation but may cause practical issues: flickering lights, motor starting problems, or equipment malfunction. The standard limits exist to prevent these problems, not as arbitrary numbers.

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