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Voltage Drop Calculator per BS 7671 for Residential Installations

BS 767118th Edition + Amendment 2:2022Residential Installations

Voltage drop in BS 7671 residential installations must not exceed 3% for lighting circuits and 5% for other circuits from the origin of the installation, as defined in Appendix 4, Table 4Ab. Regulation 525.1 sets permissible limits referenced to nominal supply voltage (230 V single-phase).

Quick Reference Table

BS 7671 Voltage Drop Limits — ResidentialBS 7671 (18th Edition + Amendment 2:2022)
ParameterValue / RequirementClause Reference
Lighting circuit limit3% (6.9 V at 230 V)Appendix 4, Table 4Ab
Power circuit limit5% (11.5 V at 230 V)Appendix 4, Table 4Ab
Permissible voltage dropFrom origin to loadRegulation 525.1
mV/A/m copper conductorsTabulated per conductor size and installation methodTable 4D1B
Diversity allowanceMay reduce design current for domestic ring finalsRegulation 525.2

How to Calculate Voltage Drop for Residential Installations

  1. 1

    Determine circuit type and supply voltage

    Identify whether the residential circuit is lighting (3% limit) or power (5% limit). Confirm 230 V single-phase or 400 V three-phase supply from the consumer unit.

  2. 2

    Establish design current and circuit length

    Calculate the design current (Ib) from the connected load. Measure the cable route length from the consumer unit to the furthest point of utilisation, including vertical runs.

  3. 3

    Select cable and find mV/A/m value

    Choose the conductor size from BS 7671 Table 4D1B (copper thermoplastic) or Table 4D2B (copper thermosetting). Read the mV/A/m value for the installation method.

  4. 4

    Calculate voltage drop

    Apply the formula: VD = (mV/A/m × Ib × L) / 1000. For single-phase circuits use the two-conductor column; for three-phase use the three-phase column values.

  5. 5

    Verify against Table 4Ab limits

    Compare the calculated voltage drop percentage against the 3% or 5% limit from Table 4Ab. If exceeded, increase conductor size or reduce circuit length by splitting the circuit.

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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

BS 7671 Appendix 4, Table 4Ab limits voltage drop to 3% for lighting circuits in domestic installations. At 230 V single-phase, this equates to a maximum of 6.9 V from the consumer unit to the luminaire. If the public supply voltage drop is known, a higher installation drop may be acceptable provided the total does not exceed the statutory limits.
For a ring final circuit wired in 2.5 mm² twin-and-earth cable (Reference Method C), look up Table 4D1B Column 3 in BS 7671. The mV/A/m value is 18 mV/A/m. Because ring circuits share current between two paths, the effective cable length used in the voltage drop calculation is the total ring length divided by 4 for a uniformly loaded ring.
Yes. Regulation 525.2 notes that when the voltage drop from the supply transformer to the origin of the installation is known to be less than the assumed value, the permissible voltage drop within the installation may be increased by the difference. In practice, the DNO rarely provides this data for residential supplies, so most designers use the standard Table 4Ab limits.

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