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Cable Sizing Calculator per BS 7671 for EV Charging Installations

BS 767118th Edition + Amendment 2:2022EV Charging Installations

Cable sizing for BS 7671 EV charging installations applies Section 722, which mandates dedicated circuits per Regulation 722.311, load management diversity from Table 722.1 for multiple charge points, and cables rated for continuous duty at the full charger output current — typically 32 A (7 kW) or 63 A (22 kW) single-phase or three-phase.

Quick Reference Table

BS 7671 EV Charging Cable Sizing ReferencesBS 7671 (18th Edition + Amendment 2:2022)
ParameterValue / RequirementClause Reference
Dedicated circuit requirementEach EV charge point on its own final circuitRegulation 722.311
Multiple charger diversityDiversity factors for 2 or more charge pointsTable 722.1
Continuous load ratingCable rated at 100% of charger output currentRegulation 722.531.1
PME earthing restrictionsTN-C-S earth requirements for outdoor chargersRegulation 722.411.4.1
Voltage dropTotal drop for the EV circuit within 5% limitAppendix 4, Table 4Ab

How to Calculate Cable Sizing for EV Charging Installations

  1. 1

    Confirm charger specification

    Identify the EV charger output — typically 7.4 kW (32 A single-phase) or 22 kW (32 A three-phase). The cable must carry 100% of this current as EV charging is a continuous load.

  2. 2

    Design the dedicated circuit

    Per Regulation 722.311, each charge point requires its own dedicated final circuit from the distribution board with appropriate overcurrent protection.

  3. 3

    Apply diversity for multiple chargers

    When sizing the upstream supply cable for multiple chargers, apply diversity from Table 722.1. For example, four chargers may have a diversity factor of 0.7, reducing the sub-main design current.

  4. 4

    Select cable size with derating

    Apply ambient temperature (Table 4B1), grouping (Table 4C1), and installation method derating to the continuous load current. A 7 kW charger typically needs 6 mm² cable for short runs.

  5. 5

    Verify voltage drop

    Check voltage drop from the distribution board to the charge point. For a 30 m run at 32 A, the drop must stay within the 5% limit of Appendix 4.

  6. 6

    Address PME earthing requirements

    For outdoor installations on a TN-C-S system, Regulation 722.411.4.1 requires additional earth electrode or use of the SWA cable armour as the CPC to limit touch voltage.

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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

A 7.4 kW single-phase charger draws 32 A continuously. Using 6 mm² twin-and-earth cable (Method C, clipped direct) with a rating of 47 A is suitable for runs up to approximately 30 m. For longer runs, voltage drop analysis per Appendix 4 may require 10 mm² cable.
Yes. Table 722.1 provides diversity factors for multiple EV charge points sharing a supply cable. For 2 chargers the factor is 0.9, for 5 it is approximately 0.6. These factors account for the likelihood that not all chargers will draw maximum current simultaneously.
On a TN-C-S (PME) supply, if the combined neutral/earth conductor is lost, the metalwork of outdoor equipment can rise to a dangerous potential. Regulation 722.411.4.1 requires mitigation such as an additional earth electrode to limit touch voltages at outdoor EV charge points.

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