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Voltage Drop Calculator per NEC (NFPA 70) for Residential Installations

NEC (NFPA 70)2026 EditionResidential InstallationsNew Edition

The NEC 2026 Edition recommends a maximum 3% voltage drop on branch circuits per Article 210.19(A) Informational Note No. 4 and 5% total (feeder plus branch circuit) per Article 215.2(A) Informational Note No. 2. These are recommendations, not mandatory requirements, but are widely adopted as design practice. Informative Annex D provides worked voltage drop calculation examples.

Quick Reference Table

NEC 2026 Voltage Drop Guidance — ResidentialNEC (NFPA 70) (2026 Edition)
ParameterValue / RequirementClause Reference
Branch circuit recommendation3% maximum (3.6 V at 120 V)Article 210.19(A), Informational Note No. 4
Feeder recommendation3% maximum for feeder portionArticle 215.2(A), Informational Note No. 2
Total combined recommendation5% maximum feeder + branch circuit (6 V at 120 V)Article 215.2(A), Informational Note No. 2
Conductor sizing for voltage dropMay require upsizing beyond ampacity minimumsArticle 210.19(A)
Worked examplesSample voltage drop calculations for various circuitsInformative Annex D
Sensitive electronic loadsReduced voltage drop limits for technical equipmentArticle 647.4

How to Calculate Voltage Drop for Residential Installations

  1. 1

    Identify circuit voltage and type

    Determine whether the residential circuit is 120 V single-phase (standard receptacles and lighting), 240 V single-phase (dryer, range, water heater), or 120/240 V split-phase. The voltage level affects both the absolute drop in volts and the percentage calculation.

  2. 2

    Establish load current and wire gauge

    Calculate the circuit load current. For NEC residential branch circuits, the conductor is typically 14 AWG (15 A circuit), 12 AWG (20 A circuit), or 10 AWG (30 A circuit). Use the conductor resistance from NEC Chapter 9, Table 8 for the selected gauge.

  3. 3

    Measure the circuit run length

    Measure the one-way distance from the panel to the furthest outlet or load. In US residential construction, runs of 50-100 feet are common. Include the distance through the attic, basement, and wall cavities.

  4. 4

    Calculate voltage drop

    For single-phase: VD = 2 × I × R × L, where R is conductor resistance in ohms per foot from Chapter 9 Table 8, and L is the one-way length in feet. For 12 AWG copper at 75°C, R = 0.00193 Ω/ft. A 20 A load at 80 feet gives VD = 2 × 20 × 0.00193 × 80 = 6.18 V (5.1% at 120 V).

  5. 5

    Compare against NEC recommendations

    Check whether the calculated drop exceeds the 3% branch circuit recommendation (3.6 V at 120 V) or the 5% total recommendation (6 V at 120 V). If exceeded, increase the conductor size — for example, from 12 AWG to 10 AWG — and recalculate.

  6. 6

    Document for permit submission

    While the NEC voltage drop values are informational notes (not mandatory code), many AHJs (Authorities Having Jurisdiction) require voltage drop calculations as part of the electrical permit submission for new residential construction.

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NEC vs IEC 60364 Cable Sizing Comparison

ParameterNECIEC 60364
Conductor sizing unitAWG/kcmilmm²
Voltage drop recommendation3% branch / 5% total4% lighting / 5% other
Reference ambient temp30°C30°C (air), 20°C (ground)
Continuous load multiplier1.25x requiredNot explicitly required
Ampacity tableTable 310.16 (60/75/90°C)Tables B.52.2–B.52.13
Conduit fill limit40% for 3+ conductorsNot specified (derating instead)

Frequently Asked Questions

No. The 3% branch circuit and 5% total voltage drop values in Articles 210.19(A) and 215.2(A) are Informational Notes — recommendations, not enforceable requirements. However, many local jurisdictions and AHJs adopt these values as mandatory through local amendments. Additionally, failing to meet these recommendations can be cited as a design deficiency in liability disputes, so most engineers and electricians treat them as practical minimums.
Use NEC Chapter 9, Table 8 for DC resistance of conductors at 75°C. For 12 AWG copper (solid), the resistance is 1.93 Ω per 1000 feet (0.00193 Ω/ft). For 14 AWG copper, it is 3.07 Ω per 1000 feet. For AC circuits at 60 Hz, the AC resistance is effectively the same as DC resistance for conductors smaller than 2/0 AWG — skin effect is negligible at these sizes.
For a 240 V single-phase circuit, the calculation is the same: VD = 2 × I × R × L. A 30 A dryer circuit using 10 AWG copper (1.21 Ω per 1000 ft) at 60 feet gives VD = 2 × 30 × 0.00121 × 60 = 4.36 V, which is 1.8% of 240 V — well within the 3% recommendation. The higher supply voltage means 240 V circuits are less sensitive to voltage drop than 120 V circuits for the same wire size and length.

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