Cable Sizing Calculator

IEC 60364-5-52IEC 60287
Calculator Input
Enter your electrical load and installation parameters to calculate the required cable size.
Load Parameters
A

Current that the cable must carry (0.1 - 2000 A)

V

Operating voltage of the circuit (12 - 1000 V)

Single-phase or three-phase electrical system

m

One-way cable run length (1 - 1000 m)

Power factor of the load (0.5 - 1.0, default: 0.8)

Cable Characteristics

Cable conductor material

Cable insulation material (affects temperature rating)

Installation Conditions

How the cable will be installed (affects heat dissipation)

°C

Operating environment temperature (-10 to 60°C, default: 30°C)

Number of cables grouped together (1 - 20, default: 1)

%

Maximum acceptable voltage drop (1 - 5%, default: 3%)

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this calculator

Our calculator considers load current (Ampacity), voltage drop limits, installation method, ambient temperature, and cable grouping factors according to IEC 60364 and NEC standards.

Excessive voltage drop causes equipment to malfunction, overheat, or fail. Standards typically limit voltage drop to 3% for lighting and 5% for other loads to ensure proper operation.

Copper has better conductivity and requires a smaller cross-section for the same current. Aluminum is lighter and cheaper but requires a larger cross-section (~1.6x) and special terminations to prevent oxidation.

Higher ambient temperatures reduce a cable's current-carrying capacity (derating). Insulation types like XLPE (90°C) handle heat better than PVC (70°C), allowing for higher ampacity.

Cables should generally be sized to handle the rating of the upstream circuit breaker (In), not just the load current (Ib), to ensure the cable is protected against overloads.

Learn More

Cable sizing ensures electrical conductors can safely carry design loads while maintaining acceptable voltage levels throughout distribution systems, balancing current-carrying capacity (ampacity), voltage drop limitations, short-circuit withstand capability, and economic considerations. Proper cable sizing prevents conductor overheating, minimizes energy losses, ensures protective device coordination, and maintains system reliability. Electrical codes worldwide (NEC, IEC 60364, BS 7671) mandate cables must carry design current without exceeding rated temperature limits—every 10°C10°\text{C} increase above rating potentially halves insulation lifespan through accelerated thermal degradation.

Ampacity and Derating Factors: Current-carrying capacity depends on conductor material (copper offers superior conductivity, with a nominal resistivity near 0.0175Ωmm2/m0.0175\,\Omega\cdot\text{mm}^2/\text{m}; aluminium provides cost/weight savings but requires larger sizes), insulation type (PVC 70°C70°\text{C}, XLPE 90°C90°\text{C}, EPR 90°C90°\text{C}), and installation method (open air provides the best cooling, enclosed conduits require significant derating). Derating factors account for installation conditions: ambient temperature corrections adjust for deviation from the 30°C30°\text{C} air reference, and grouping factors (about 0.80 for two circuits down to ~0.57 for six) address thermal interaction between adjacent cables sharing conduits or trays. Soil thermal resistivity additionally affects directly buried cables, though this tool models the buried case with a single installation factor rather than a soil-resistivity input. Modern installations increasingly specify XLPE for its superior thermal performance, moisture resistance, and aging characteristics.

Voltage Drop Constraints: While ampacity ensures safe operation, voltage drop affects equipment performance and power quality. Excessive drop causes motor overheating, lamp flickering, control system malfunction, and elevated I2RI^2R losses. As guidance (not a hard code mandate), IEC 60364-5-52 Annex G recommends limiting voltage drop to about 3% for lighting and 5% for other uses; the NEC's 3% branch / 5% total figures appear only in informational notes (210.19, 215.2) and are recommendations rather than enforceable limits. These represent a compromise between conductor cost and system performance. This calculator computes voltage drop using the full impedance form, Vd=2×I×(Rcosϕ+Xsinϕ)V_d = 2 \times I \times (R\cos\phi + X\sin\phi) for single-phase and Vd=3×I×(Rcosϕ+Xsinϕ)V_d = \sqrt{3} \times I \times (R\cos\phi + X\sin\phi) for three-phase, where RR and XX are the total one-way conductor values. Inductive reactance becomes significant in large cables (>95mm2>95\,\text{mm}^2) and long feeders, particularly at low power factors, so both resistance and reactance are always included.

Short-Circuit Protection: Cables must also withstand fault currents without insulation damage during the protective device's operating time. The adiabatic equation relates the minimum conductor size to fault current magnitude and duration, assuming all thermal energy remains in the conductor during the brief fault. This check typically governs equipment grounding/protective conductors and bonding jumpers, where fault current may greatly exceed normal load current. Note: this calculator sizes the conductor by ampacity and voltage drop only — it does not perform the short-circuit adiabatic check. The formula and material constants below are provided so you can verify the minimum fault-withstand area by hand and coordinate it with your protective device settings (see IEC 60364-5-54 for protective-conductor sizing).

Economic and Harmonic Considerations: Life-cycle cost analysis balances initial conductor cost against lifetime I2RI^2R losses—larger cables reduce operating costs through decreased electricity consumption. High-utilization feeders justify upsizing beyond minimum code requirements. Harmonic currents from modern electronic loads (VFDs, switching power supplies, LED lighting) increase conductor heating through skin effect. Neutral conductors in three-phase systems may carry triplen harmonics (3rd, 9th, 15th) that add arithmetically rather than canceling, potentially exceeding phase conductor currents and requiring neutral upsizing.

Standards Reference: NEC Article 310 specifies conductor ampacity and sizing requirements. IEC 60364-5-52 provides international cable selection standards. IEEE 141 (Red Book) addresses industrial power system cable sizing including voltage drop and short-circuit analysis.

Kitchen Circuit - 3-Bedroom House with Electric Range

Size a dedicated cable for a 240 V kitchen circuit with a 40 A electric range and oven

1
System Voltage: 240 V
2
Load Current: 40 A
3
Cable Length: 15 m
4
Cable Material: Copper
5
Power Factor: 1.0
6
System Type: Single-Phase
7
Ambient Temperature: 30°C
8
Insulation Type: PVC (70°C)
9
Installation Method: Enclosed in Conduit
10
Max Voltage Drop: 3.0%

Result

Recommended:
10 mm² copper cable (≈ 7 AWG equivalent)

Calculations

  • Base ampacity (10 mm² Cu/PVC): 61 A
  • Installation derating factor (enclosed conduit): 0.80
  • Corrected ampacity: 61 A × 0.80 = 48.8 A
  • Utilization: 40 A / 48.8 A = 82%
  • Actual voltage drop: 2.10 V (0.88%)
  • Governing criterion: ampacity (not voltage drop)

Equipment

  • Circuit breaker: 50 A (next standard rating above the 40 A continuous load)

Additional Notes

The enclosed-conduit installation applies a 0.80 derating factor, so even with no temperature or grouping correction the cable is sized by ampacity rather than voltage drop. At only 15 m the voltage drop is negligible (0.88%). For a continuous load, confirm the breaker and conductor are rated for at least 125% of the load per local practice. Verify local code requirements and inspector preferences before final selection.

Office Building Main Distribution - 3-Floor Commercial Building

Size main distribution feeder cable for 3-floor commercial office building

1
System Voltage: 400 V
2
Load Current: 200 A
3
Cable Length: 45 m
4
Cable Material: Copper
5
Power Factor: 0.85
6
System Type: Three-Phase
7
Ambient Temperature: 35°C
8
Insulation Type: PVC (70°C)
9
Installation Method: Cable Tray
10
Number of Grouped Circuits: 4
11
Max Voltage Drop: 2.0%

Result

Recommended:
120 mm² copper cable (≈ 250 kcmil equivalent)

Calculations

  • Base ampacity (120 mm² Cu/PVC): 299 A
  • Temperature factor (35°C, PVC): 0.94
  • Grouping factor (4 circuits): 0.65
  • Cable-tray installation factor: 1.10
  • Corrected ampacity: 299 A × 0.94 × 0.65 × 1.10 = 201 A
  • Utilization: 200 A / 201 A = 99.5%
  • Actual voltage drop: 2.54 V (0.64%)
  • Governing criterion: ampacity (grouping derating dominates)

Equipment

  • Configuration: 3× 120 mm² phase conductors + neutral and PE sized per the installation

Compliance

  • Meets IEC 60364-5-52 feeder requirements

Additional Notes

The combined derating factor here is 0.94 × 0.65 × 1.10 = 0.672, dominated by the 0.65 grouping factor for four grouped circuits. This pushes the governing size to 120 mm² even though the 45 m voltage drop is only 0.64%. Utilization sits at 99.5%, so if future load growth is expected, consider 150 mm² for margin. Include an equipment grounding/protective conductor and coordinate with the upstream overcurrent protective device.

Industrial Motor Feeder - 75kW VFD Motor Underground Installation

Size underground feeder cable for 75kW motor with VFD drive

1
Load Current: 142 A
2
System Voltage: 480 V
3
Cable Length: 85 m
4
Cable Material: Copper
5
Power Factor: 0.92
6
System Type: Three-Phase
7
Insulation Type: PVC (70°C)
8
Installation Method: Underground (Direct Burial)
9
Ambient Temperature: 25°C
10
Max Voltage Drop: 2.0%

Result

Recommended:
50 mm² copper cable (≈ 1/0 AWG equivalent)

Calculations

  • Base ampacity (50 mm² Cu/PVC): 168 A
  • Temperature factor (25°C, PVC): 1.06
  • Underground installation factor: 0.90
  • Corrected ampacity: 168 A × 1.06 × 0.90 = 160.3 A
  • Utilization: 142 A / 160.3 A = 88.6%
  • Actual voltage drop: 7.39 V (1.54%)
  • Both ampacity and voltage-drop checks select 50 mm²

Equipment

  • Configuration: 3× 50 mm² phase conductors + protective conductor per the installation

Compliance

  • Meets IEC 60364-5-52 for motor feeders

Additional Notes

The calculator sizes this run at 50 mm² (1.54% drop, 88.6% utilization). VFD applications warrant extra engineering attention beyond the cross-section: (1) use shielded VFD-rated cable or a metallic conduit for EMI control, (2) keep voltage drop below 2% to avoid motor overheating and VFD trips, (3) size the protective conductor per IEC 60364-5-54, and (4) account for harmonic heating. Some designers deliberately uplift one size (to 70 mm²) for harmonic and thermal margin on long, continuously loaded VFD feeders — that uplift is a designer decision separate from the minimum size the calculator returns.