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Cable Sizing for Beginners — A Practical Introduction

A beginner-friendly guide to electrical cable sizing. Learn why cable sizing matters, what determines cable size, the basic steps involved, common cable sizes and their uses, and how to get started with professional cable sizing software.

12 min readUpdated February 21, 2026
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Why Cable Sizing Matters

Selecting the right cable size is one of the most fundamental tasks in electrical engineering. Get it wrong, and the consequences can be severe:

  • Cable too small: The conductor overheats under load. Over time, the insulation degrades, becomes brittle, and can eventually ignite surrounding materials. This is a leading cause of electrical fires in buildings. In extreme cases, the cable can fail catastrophically during a fault, creating an arc flash hazard.
  • Cable too large: While not a safety hazard, oversized cables waste money on materials, are physically harder to install (heavier, stiffer, larger bend radius), and require larger containment systems (conduit, tray, trunking). For a large project, the cost penalty of systematically oversizing cables can be substantial.

Cable sizing finds the engineering sweet spot: the smallest cable that safely carries the required current, keeps the voltage drop within acceptable limits, and can withstand short-circuit faults long enough for the protection device to trip.

Every country has national electrical standards that mandate how cables must be sized. In Australia and New Zealand, this is AS/NZS 3008. In the UK, it is BS 7671. In the US, the NEC (NFPA 70). These standards all follow the same fundamental engineering principles but differ in specific tables, reference conditions, and allowable limits.

What Determines Cable Size?

Several factors work together to determine the minimum acceptable cable size for a circuit:

  1. How much current the circuit carries: This is the starting point. A 10 A lighting circuit needs a much smaller cable than a 100 A motor circuit. Current is determined by the power of the load and the supply voltage.
  2. How the cable is installed: A cable in free air can dissipate heat easily and carry more current. The same cable buried in conduit inside an insulated wall traps heat and must carry less current. The installation method is the single biggest modifier of cable capacity.
  3. How hot the environment is: Cables are rated for a specific ambient temperature (typically 30–40°C depending on the standard). Hotter environments mean the cable starts closer to its thermal limit and can carry less current.
  4. How many cables are grouped together: When multiple cables share the same route (in conduit, trunking, or on a cable tray), they heat each other up. More cables together means each individual cable must be derated — it can carry less current than when installed alone.
  5. How far the cable runs: Longer cables have more resistance, which means more voltage is lost along the cable (voltage drop). For long runs, you may need a larger cable than the current alone would require, just to keep the voltage at the load end high enough.
  6. Copper or aluminium: Copper is a better conductor than aluminium, so copper cables of the same size can carry more current. Aluminium cables must be about 1.6× the cross-section of copper for equivalent capacity, but are lighter and cheaper.

The Three Essential Checks

Every cable sizing calculation, whether done by hand or by software, must pass three fundamental checks:

  1. Current capacity check: Can the cable carry the load current continuously without exceeding its maximum operating temperature? This check uses current rating tables from the applicable standard, adjusted by derating factors for temperature, grouping, and other conditions. The cable must have a current rating ≥ the protective device rating, after applying all derating factors.
  2. Voltage drop check: Is the voltage at the load end still high enough for the equipment to function correctly? Standards typically limit voltage drop to 3–5% of the supply voltage. Voltage drop is calculated from the cable's impedance (resistance and reactance per metre), the current, and the cable length.
  3. Fault current (short circuit) check: Can the cable survive a short circuit long enough for the circuit breaker or fuse to trip? During a fault, enormous currents flow through the cable for a fraction of a second, heating it rapidly. The cable must withstand this energy (measured as I²t) without its insulation exceeding its short-circuit temperature limit (typically 160°C for PVC, 250°C for XLPE).

The final cable size is the largest of the three results. In practice, the current capacity check usually governs for short to medium cable runs. For long runs, the voltage drop check often requires a larger cable. The fault current check is most relevant for cables near the main switchboard where fault levels are highest.

A Simple Real-World Example

Let's size a cable for a 10 kW electric oven in a house. Here are the basic parameters:

  • Supply: 230 V single-phase
  • Load: 10 kW, power factor 1.0 (purely resistive)
  • Cable run: 15 metres from the consumer unit to the kitchen
  • Installation: PVC twin-and-earth cable in conduit in the wall

Step 1: Calculate the current

Current = Power / Voltage = 10,000 / 230 = 43.5 A

Step 2: Select a protective device

The next standard circuit breaker rating above 43.5 A is 50 A.

Step 3: Account for installation conditions

In conduit in an insulated wall, the cable's capacity is reduced. With ambient temperature derating and no grouping with other circuits, the combined derating factor might be around 0.87. So the cable needs to be rated for at least: 50 / 0.87 = 57.5 A.

Step 4: Select from the tables

Looking at the current rating table for this installation method, a 10 mm² copper cable might be rated at 57 A (just short) and a 16 mm² at 76 A (more than enough). We select 16 mm².

Step 5: Check voltage drop

For 16 mm² cable at 43.5 A over 15 m, the voltage drop is about 1.5% — well within the 5% limit.

Result: 16 mm² twin-and-earth cable, protected by a 50 A MCB.

Common Cable Sizes and Their Typical Uses

While every circuit must be individually calculated, certain cable sizes are commonly associated with specific applications in domestic and commercial installations:

Size (mm²)Typical Protective DeviceCommon Applications
1.06 ALighting circuits (limited use, check derating)
1.56–10 ALighting circuits (standard domestic)
2.516–20 ARing final circuits (UK), general power outlets
4.025–32 AImmersion heaters, small cookers, dedicated socket outlets
6.032–40 AElectric showers (7–9 kW), small cooker circuits
10.040–50 ACookers, electric showers (10 kW+), sub-main feeds
16.050–63 ALarge cookers, small sub-distribution boards, EV chargers
25.063–80 ASub-distribution boards, large single loads
35–5080–125 AMain tails (consumer unit supply), heavy industrial loads
Important: These are rough guides only. The actual cable size required depends on the specific installation conditions, derating factors, and cable run length. Always perform a proper cable sizing calculation — never select a cable based solely on the circuit breaker rating.

Manual Calculation vs Software

Cable sizing can be performed manually using printed standard tables and a calculator, or with dedicated software like ECalPro. Each approach has its place:

Manual calculation is useful for understanding the fundamentals, for simple circuits with straightforward conditions, and for spot-checking software results. It requires looking up values in multiple tables, applying derating factors, and checking voltage drop — a process that takes 10–30 minutes per circuit.

Software calculation is essential for productivity on projects with many circuits, for complex installations with multiple derating factors, and for multi-standard compliance (where the same circuit needs to be sized under different standards for different jurisdictions). Software also eliminates transcription errors when reading values from tables and provides automatic documentation with clause references.

For professional electrical engineers, software is the standard tool for production work, while manual skills remain important for engineering judgement, verification, and understanding what the software is doing. The best practice is to be able to do both.

Next Steps

Now that you understand the basics of cable sizing, here are recommended next steps to deepen your knowledge:

  • Read the Cable Sizing Methodology guide for the detailed engineering procedure with formulas and multi-standard references
  • Study the Derating Factors guide to understand how temperature, grouping, and installation conditions affect cable sizing
  • Work through the Residential Cable Sizing Example to see a complete step-by-step calculation with real numbers
  • Try the Cable Sizing Calculator to see how the process works in practice and produces professional reports with clause references

The transition from understanding the concepts to confidently sizing cables comes with practice. Each circuit you calculate builds your engineering judgement about which factors dominate, when to expect voltage drop to govern, and how installation method choices affect the outcome.

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Frequently Asked Questions

It depends on the installation method, insulation type, and derating factors. As a rough guide for domestic installations, a 2.5 mm² PVC cable can typically carry 20 A when clipped direct to a surface, but may need to be 4 mm² if installed in conduit in an insulated wall with other circuits. Always perform a proper calculation rather than relying on rules of thumb — the installation conditions can change the answer significantly.
For a typical 8.5 kW electric shower on a 230 V supply, the current draw is approximately 37 A. With a 40 A MCB and standard domestic derating factors, a 6 mm² or 10 mm² cable is typically required depending on the cable run length and installation method. Higher-powered showers (10-12 kW) may require 10 mm² or even 16 mm². Always check voltage drop for the specific cable length in your installation.
No. The calculated cable size is the minimum safe size for the specific installation conditions. Using a smaller cable creates a fire hazard — the cable will overheat under load, degrading the insulation and potentially causing a fire. Building regulations and electrical standards exist specifically to prevent undersized cables from being installed.

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