Cable Sizing Standard Comparison — AS/NZS 3008 vs BS 7671 vs IEC 60364 vs NEC
Comprehensive four-way comparison of cable sizing standards: AS/NZS 3008, BS 7671, IEC 60364-5-52, and NEC/NFPA 70. Covers voltage drop limits, ambient temperature references, conductor materials, grouping factors, and a project-type decision guide.
Introduction
There are four major cable sizing standards used worldwide: AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 (Australia/New Zealand), BS 7671:2018+A2 (United Kingdom), IEC 60364-5-52 (International), and NEC/NFPA 70:2023 (United States and countries adopting US practice). Each standard evolved from different engineering traditions, climate conditions, and regulatory philosophies.
For multinational engineering firms, EPC contractors, and consultants working across jurisdictions, understanding the differences between these standards is not academic — it directly affects cable sizes, project costs, and regulatory compliance. The same circuit parameters can produce a different cable size under each standard, and using the wrong standard in the wrong jurisdiction can result in rejected designs, failed inspections, and legal liability.
This guide provides a detailed four-way comparison covering every major aspect of cable sizing methodology.
Master Comparison Table
| Feature | AS/NZS 3008:2017 | BS 7671:2018+A2 | IEC 60364-5-52 | NEC/NFPA 70:2023 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Origin | Standards Australia / Standards NZ | IET / BSI (UK) | IEC (Geneva) | NFPA (USA) |
| Cable sizing scope | Standalone cable selection standard | Appendix 4 within full installation standard | Part 5-52 within full installation series | Article 310 within full electrical code |
| Unit system | Metric (mm²) | Metric (mm²) | Metric (mm²) | AWG/kcmil |
| Reference ambient (air) | 40°C | 30°C | 30°C | 30°C |
| Reference ground temp | 25°C | 20°C | 20°C | 20°C |
| Soil thermal resistivity | 1.2 K·m/W | 2.5 K·m/W | 2.5 K·m/W | N/A (not used) |
| Installation methods | 29 (Table 3) | 10 (Table 4A2) | 10+ (Table B.52.1) | Wiring methods (Chapter 3) |
| Voltage drop limit | 5% total | 3% + 2% (split) | 4% recommended | No fixed limit |
| Key insulation types | V-75, V-90, X-90 | PVC 70°C, XLPE 90°C, MI | PVC, XLPE, EPR | THHN, THWN, XHHW |
| Neutral counted in grouping? | Not for balanced loads | Not for balanced loads | Not for balanced loads | Yes (counted as CCC in some cases) |
| Short circuit check | Adiabatic (I²t = k²S²) | Adiabatic (I²t = k²S²) | Adiabatic (I²t = k²S²) | Not required by NEC |
Voltage Drop Limits: The Most Visible Difference
Voltage drop limits are the most immediately visible difference between the four standards, and they frequently determine the final cable size for long cable runs.
| Standard | Lighting VD | Power VD | How It Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| AS/NZS 3000 | 5% total | 5% total | Single limit from origin to utilisation point. No split between distribution and final circuit. Designer allocates the budget. |
| BS 7671 | 3% (final) / 5% (total) | 5% (final) / 5% (total) | Table 4Ab gives 3% for lighting final circuits, 5% for power. Note 2 permits up to 5% total when distribution VD is accounted for. |
| IEC 60364 | 4% recommended | 4% recommended | IEC 60364-5-52, Clause 525 gives 4% as a recommendation, not a hard limit. National implementations may override. |
| NEC/NFPA 70 | 3% (FPN) / 5% (FPN) | 3% (FPN) / 5% (FPN) | No mandatory limit. NEC 210.19(A) FPN and 215.2(A)(4) FPN give 3% branch circuit / 5% total as informational notes — they are recommendations, not requirements. |
The practical impact is significant. Consider a 100 m cable run at 230 V feeding a 32 A load:
Voltage drop comparison (100 m, 230 V, 32 A, copper, PVC, single-phase):
Standard VD limit Max VD (V) Cable size required
AS/NZS 3008 5% (11.5V) 11.5 V 10 mm² (VD = 8.9 V = 3.9%)
BS 7671 5% (11.5V) 11.5 V 10 mm² (VD = 9.2 V = 4.0%)
IEC 60364 4% (9.2V) 9.2 V 16 mm² (VD = 5.8 V = 2.5%)
NEC 5% (FPN) 11.5 V #8 AWG (8.37 mm², VD ~ 10.6 V = 4.6%)
Note: The IEC 4% limit forces a larger cable in this example.
The NEC permits a smaller conductor because AWG sizes don't match
metric sizes and the VD limit is advisory.
The AS/NZS approach of a single 5% limit with no split gives Australian designers maximum flexibility. The IEC 4% limit is the most restrictive in practice. The NEC’s advisory-only approach is the most permissive, though most US engineers treat the 5% FPN as a de facto requirement.
Ambient Temperature Reference: 40 deg C vs 30 deg C
The reference ambient temperature is the single most impactful parameter difference between the standards. It affects both the base current ratings in the tables and the derating factors applied to those ratings.
| Standard | Air Reference | Ground Reference | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| AS/NZS 3008 | 40°C | 25°C | Australian climate: 40°C ambient is common in summer across most of the continent |
| BS 7671 | 30°C | 20°C | UK climate: 30°C is a reasonable upper bound for indoor installations |
| IEC 60364 | 30°C | 20°C | International reference, adopted by BS 7671 and many national standards |
| NEC | 30°C | 20°C | US reference, same as IEC |
The consequences of this difference are counter-intuitive:
- At 30°C ambient: AS/NZS 3008 gives a bonus factor > 1.0 (because 30°C is below the 40°C reference). BS 7671, IEC, and NEC require no derating (30°C is their reference). Result: AS/NZS 3008 may allow a smaller cable.
- At 40°C ambient: AS/NZS 3008 requires no derating (40°C is the reference). BS 7671, IEC, and NEC all require significant derating. Result: the three 30°C-reference standards require a larger cable.
- At 50°C ambient: All four standards require derating, but the derating factor from BS 7671/IEC/NEC is much larger because the temperature rise above their reference (20°C) is double the rise above the AS/NZS reference (10°C).
Temperature derating factors for 90 deg C XLPE cable:
Ambient AS/NZS 3008 BS 7671/IEC NEC (Table 310.15(B)(1))
25 deg C 1.07 1.04 1.04
30 deg C 1.04 1.00 1.00
35 deg C 1.00 0.96 0.96
40 deg C 0.96 (ref) 0.91 0.91
45 deg C 0.92 0.87 0.87
50 deg C 0.87 0.82 0.82
55 deg C 0.82 0.76 0.76
60 deg C 0.76 0.71 0.71
For projects in the Middle East, Africa, or tropical regions where ambient temperatures routinely exceed 40°C, the choice of standard has a material impact on cable sizes and project cost.
Conductor Material and Size Series
The three IEC-derived standards (AS/NZS, BS, IEC) all use the metric cable size series: 1, 1.5, 2.5, 4, 6, 10, 16, 25, 35, 50, 70, 95, 120, 150, 185, 240, 300, 400, 500, 630 mm². The NEC uses the AWG/kcmil system, which is not directly equivalent.
| Metric (mm²) | Nearest AWG/kcmil | AWG Actual (mm²) | Size Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.5 | 14 AWG | 2.08 | AWG is 39% larger |
| 2.5 | 12 AWG | 3.31 | AWG is 32% larger |
| 4 | 10 AWG | 5.26 | AWG is 32% larger |
| 6 | 10 AWG | 5.26 | Metric is 14% larger |
| 10 | 8 AWG | 8.37 | Metric is 19% larger |
| 16 | 6 AWG | 13.3 | Metric is 20% larger |
| 25 | 4 AWG | 21.2 | Metric is 18% larger |
| 35 | 2 AWG | 33.6 | Metric is 4% larger |
| 50 | 1/0 AWG | 53.5 | AWG is 7% larger |
| 70 | 2/0 AWG | 67.4 | Metric is 4% larger |
| 95 | 3/0 AWG | 85.0 | Metric is 12% larger |
| 120 | 4/0 AWG | 107 | Metric is 12% larger |
| 150 | 300 kcmil | 152 | Near identical |
| 185 | 350 kcmil | 177 | Metric is 5% larger |
| 240 | 500 kcmil | 253 | AWG is 5% larger |
The size mismatch means that a direct “equivalent” swap between metric and AWG conductors can result in an undersized conductor. When converting designs between metric and AWG systems, always recalculate from first principles using the appropriate standard — do not simply substitute the nearest AWG for the metric size.
Another key difference: NEC insulation designations (THHN, THWN, XHHW, USE) do not correspond one-to-one with IEC/metric designations (PVC, XLPE, EPR). The temperature ratings are similar (e.g., THHN = 90°C dry, similar to XLPE 90°C) but the mechanical properties, fire performance, and application rules differ.
Grouping Factor Philosophy
When multiple cables are installed together, mutual heating reduces the current-carrying capacity of each cable. All four standards address this with grouping (or bundling/adjustment) factors, but the methodology differs:
AS/NZS 3008 (Table 25)
Provides grouping factors based on the number of circuits and the installation arrangement (cables touching, spaced, in conduit, on tray). Single table covering all configurations. Factors range from 1.00 (single circuit) down to approximately 0.38 (20+ circuits in conduit).
BS 7671 (Tables 4C1–4C5)
Multiple tables for different installation methods. Table 4C1 covers cables bunched (touching), Table 4C2 for single-layer on walls/floors, Table 4C3 for single-layer on perforated trays, Table 4C4 for single-layer on ladder. More granular than AS/NZS but more tables to navigate.
IEC 60364-5-52 (Table B.52.17 onwards)
Similar to BS 7671 (which derives from IEC). Multiple tables for different installation arrangements. National annexes may modify the factors for local conditions.
NEC Article 310 (Table 310.15(C)(1))
The NEC approach is notably different. Table 310.15(C)(1) provides adjustment factors based on the number of current-carrying conductors (not circuits) in a raceway or cable:
| Current-Carrying Conductors | NEC Adjustment Factor | Equivalent IEC/BS Circuits |
|---|---|---|
| 1–3 | 1.00 | 1 circuit (3-phase) = no derating |
| 4–6 | 0.80 | ~2 circuits |
| 7–9 | 0.70 | ~3 circuits |
| 10–20 | 0.50 | ~3–7 circuits |
| 21–30 | 0.45 | ~7–10 circuits |
| 31–40 | 0.40 | ~10–13 circuits |
| 41+ | 0.35 | ~14+ circuits |
Key NEC difference: The NEC counts current-carrying conductors, not circuits. A three-phase circuit has 3 current-carrying conductors (the neutral is excluded for balanced loads per 310.15(E)). A single-phase circuit has 2 current-carrying conductors. This means the NEC adjustment factor for “3 circuits” depends on whether they are single-phase or three-phase.
The NEC also has specific provisions in 310.15(C)(2) that allow the grouping factor to be reduced or eliminated for cables installed with maintained spacing on cable trays — a significant advantage for tray installations that the IEC-derived standards do not offer as generously.
Short Circuit Withstand: Required or Not?
A fundamental difference in philosophy exists between the IEC-derived standards and the NEC regarding short-circuit protection of cables:
| Standard | Short Circuit Check Required? | Method |
|---|---|---|
| AS/NZS 3008 / AS/NZS 3000 | Yes (Clause 5.3.4) | Adiabatic equation: I²t ≤ k²S² |
| BS 7671 | Yes (Regulation 434.5) | Adiabatic equation: I²t ≤ k²S² |
| IEC 60364 | Yes (Clause 434.5) | Adiabatic equation: I²t ≤ k²S² |
| NEC | No explicit requirement | N/A — NEC relies on protective device withstand ratings per 110.10 |
Adiabatic equation (IEC-derived standards):
I²t ≤ k²S²
Rearranged to find minimum cable size:
S_min = sqrt(I² × t) / k
Where:
S = conductor cross-section (mm²)
I = prospective short-circuit current (A, rms)
t = disconnection time (s)
k = material constant:
143 (Cu/PVC), 176 (Cu/XLPE), 115 (Cu/rubber)
94 (Al/PVC), 116 (Al/XLPE)
Example: 20 kA fault, 0.1 s clearing, copper/PVC
S_min = sqrt(20,000² × 0.1) / 143 = 44.2 mm² → select 50 mm²
The NEC takes a different approach: Article 110.10 requires that equipment be rated for the available fault current, and Article 240 requires that overcurrent devices interrupt the fault before equipment damage. The NEC does not require an explicit adiabatic calculation for cables, relying instead on the coordination between the protective device and the equipment ratings.
In practice, the IEC approach is more rigorous for cable protection. In high fault-current installations (near transformers, at main switchboards), the adiabatic check can require a larger cable than the current-carrying capacity calculation alone would indicate.
Project-Type Decision Guide: Which Standard to Use
The choice of cable sizing standard is determined by the project location and applicable regulations. When no local regulation specifies a standard, the following decision guide helps:
| Project Location / Type | Recommended Standard | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Australia / New Zealand | AS/NZS 3008 + AS/NZS 3000 | Legally required by state/territory regulations |
| United Kingdom / Ireland | BS 7671 | Referenced by Building Regulations Part P |
| European Union | IEC 60364 / national CENELEC edition | HD 60364 harmonised across EU |
| United States / Canada | NEC / CEC | Adopted as law in all US states and Canadian provinces |
| Middle East (UAE, Qatar, KSA) | BS 7671 or IEC 60364 | Most Gulf states specify BS 7671 or IEC with local amendments |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | BS 7671 or national (SANS 10142) | Former British colonies; South Africa has own standard based on IEC |
| Southeast Asia (Singapore, Malaysia) | BS 7671 / IEC / local | Singapore uses SS 638 (based on BS 7671); Malaysia uses MS IEC 60364 |
| Japan | JIS / national | Unique standards; not directly IEC-aligned |
| International (offshore, marine, mining) | IEC 60364 | Default for international projects with no specific jurisdiction |
| Multi-jurisdictional EPC | Calculate under all applicable standards | Use the most conservative result, document differences |
For projects where the applicable standard is ambiguous (e.g., an international mining camp in a country with no published national wiring standard), it is common practice to adopt IEC 60364 as the base standard with project-specific amendments. The design basis document should clearly state which standard applies and any departures from its requirements.
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