AWG Wire Gauge Calculator
Wire gauge conversion, NEC current rating, and voltage-drop sizing — copper & aluminum, metric & imperial.
A free reference calculator for wire-and-cable engineers. American Wire Gauge (AWG) is the standardized system for conductor diameter — a smaller AWG number means a thicker wire. Use the tools below to convert AWG to metric, look up NEC current rating (ampacity), or size a conductor to a voltage-drop limit.
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Current rating
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AWG wire size chart (diameter, area, resistance & ampacity)
Reference values for solid copper conductors. Diameter and area follow ASTM B258; resistance is DC at 20 °C; ampacity columns are NEC NFPA 70 Table 310.16 (≤3 conductors, 30 °C ambient).
| AWG | Ø mm | Ø in | Area mm² | kcmil | Ω/km (Cu) | 60 °C A | 75 °C A | 90 °C A |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/0 | 11.684 | 0.4600 | 107.2193 | 211.60 | 0.16 | 195 | 230 | 260 |
| 3/0 | 10.405 | 0.4096 | 85.0288 | 167.81 | 0.20 | 165 | 200 | 225 |
| 2/0 | 9.266 | 0.3648 | 67.4309 | 133.08 | 0.26 | 145 | 175 | 195 |
| 1/0 | 8.251 | 0.3249 | 53.4751 | 105.53 | 0.32 | 125 | 150 | 170 |
| 1 | 7.348 | 0.2893 | 42.4077 | 83.69 | 0.41 | 110 | 130 | 145 |
| 2 | 6.544 | 0.2576 | 33.6308 | 66.37 | 0.51 | 95 | 115 | 130 |
| 3 | 5.827 | 0.2294 | 26.6705 | 52.63 | 0.65 | 85 | 100 | 110 |
| 4 | 5.189 | 0.2043 | 21.1506 | 41.74 | 0.82 | 70 | 85 | 95 |
| 5 | 4.621 | 0.1819 | 16.7732 | 33.10 | 1.03 | — | — | — |
| 6 | 4.115 | 0.1620 | 13.3018 | 26.25 | 1.30 | 55 | 65 | 75 |
| 7 | 3.665 | 0.1443 | 10.5488 | 20.82 | 1.63 | — | — | — |
| 8 | 3.264 | 0.1285 | 8.3656 | 16.51 | 2.06 | 40 | 50 | 55 |
| 9 | 2.906 | 0.1144 | 6.6342 | 13.09 | 2.60 | — | — | — |
| 10 | 2.588 | 0.1019 | 5.2612 | 10.38 | 3.28 | 30 | 35 | 40 |
| 11 | 2.305 | 0.0907 | 4.1723 | 8.23 | 4.13 | — | — | — |
| 12 | 2.053 | 0.0808 | 3.3088 | 6.53 | 5.21 | 20 | 25 | 30 |
| 13 | 1.828 | 0.0720 | 2.6240 | 5.18 | 6.57 | — | — | — |
| 14 | 1.628 | 0.0641 | 2.0809 | 4.11 | 8.28 | 15 | 20 | 25 |
| 15 | 1.450 | 0.0571 | 1.6502 | 3.26 | 10.45 | — | — | — |
| 16 | 1.291 | 0.0508 | 1.3087 | 2.58 | 13.17 | — | — | — |
| 17 | 1.150 | 0.0453 | 1.0378 | 2.05 | 16.61 | — | — | — |
| 18 | 1.024 | 0.0403 | 0.8230 | 1.62 | 20.95 | — | — | — |
| 19 | 0.912 | 0.0359 | 0.6527 | 1.29 | 26.41 | — | — | — |
| 20 | 0.812 | 0.0320 | 0.5176 | 1.02 | 33.31 | — | — | — |
| 21 | 0.723 | 0.0285 | 0.4105 | 0.81 | 42.00 | — | — | — |
| 22 | 0.644 | 0.0253 | 0.3255 | 0.64 | 52.96 | — | — | — |
| 23 | 0.573 | 0.0226 | 0.2582 | 0.51 | 66.78 | — | — | — |
| 24 | 0.511 | 0.0201 | 0.2047 | 0.40 | 84.21 | — | — | — |
| 25 | 0.455 | 0.0179 | 0.1624 | 0.32 | 106.18 | — | — | — |
| 26 | 0.405 | 0.0159 | 0.1288 | 0.25 | 133.90 | — | — | — |
| 27 | 0.361 | 0.0142 | 0.1021 | 0.20 | 168.84 | — | — | — |
| 28 | 0.321 | 0.0126 | 0.0810 | 0.16 | 212.90 | — | — | — |
| 29 | 0.286 | 0.0113 | 0.0642 | 0.13 | 268.47 | — | — | — |
| 30 | 0.255 | 0.0100 | 0.0509 | 0.10 | 338.53 | — | — | — |
| 31 | 0.227 | 0.0089 | 0.0404 | 0.08 | 426.88 | — | — | — |
| 32 | 0.202 | 0.0080 | 0.0320 | 0.06 | 538.28 | — | — | — |
| 33 | 0.180 | 0.0071 | 0.0254 | 0.05 | 678.76 | — | — | — |
| 34 | 0.160 | 0.0063 | 0.0201 | 0.04 | 855.91 | — | — | — |
| 35 | 0.143 | 0.0056 | 0.0160 | 0.03 | 1079.28 | — | — | — |
| 36 | 0.127 | 0.0050 | 0.0127 | 0.03 | 1360.94 | — | — | — |
| 37 | 0.113 | 0.0045 | 0.0100 | 0.02 | 1716.12 | — | — | — |
| 38 | 0.101 | 0.0040 | 0.0080 | 0.02 | 2163.98 | — | — | — |
| 39 | 0.090 | 0.0035 | 0.0063 | 0.01 | 2728.73 | — | — | — |
| 40 | 0.080 | 0.0031 | 0.0050 | 0.01 | 3440.87 | — | — | — |
How it works — formulas & references
d(mm) = 0.127 · 92^((36−n)/39)
Diameter and area (π/4·d²) follow ASTM B258. IEC 60228 defines the equivalent metric conductor classes.
R = ρ · L / A (ρ at 20 °C)
Resistance is DC at 20 °C — copper ρ=1.724×10⁻⁸ Ω·m, aluminum 2.826×10⁻⁸ Ω·m. For large conductors at 60 Hz, AC resistance is slightly higher due to skin effect. IEC 60228 defines equivalent metric conductor classes.
NEC 310.16 × ambient × bundling
NEC NFPA 70 Table 310.16, with 310.15(B) ambient and 310.15(C) bundling derating. IEC 60364-5-52 for metric installations.
- Allowed drop = 3 % × 12 V =
0.36 V - Allowed resistance = 0.36 V ÷ (2 × 15 A × 5 m) =
0.0024 Ω/m(k = 2 for DC round-trip) - Smallest gauge at or below that → 8 AWG (2.06 Ω/km = 0.00206 Ω/m); 10 AWG (3.28 Ω/km) is too thin
- Actual drop at 8 AWG = 2 × 15 × 0.00206 × 5 =
0.31 V (2.6 %)✓
Results are reference estimates — verify against the applicable code and the authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) for any installation.
Sources
- ASTM B258 — standard AWG dimensions
- NEC NFPA 70, Table 310.16 & 310.15 — ampacity & derating
- IEC 60228 — metric conductor classes
- IEC 60364-5-52 — current-carrying capacity & installation
Reviewed by
TeleWire Technology · ISO 9001:2015 certified cable-assembly manufacturer
Last reviewed June 2026
AWG vs SWG vs metric (mm²)
Three systems describe the same wire — and the same gauge number is a different diameter in each. Always confirm which standard a spec uses.
American Wire Gauge — the US standard, defined by formula. A lower number means a thicker wire.
British / Imperial Standard Wire Gauge — a legacy fixed table that runs thicker than AWG for the same number.
IEC 60228 — states the actual conductor cross-section, which ultimately sets the current capacity.
| Gauge # | AWG Ø mm | SWG Ø mm |
|---|---|---|
| 16 | 1.291 | 1.626 |
| 18 | 1.024 | 1.219 |
| 20 | 0.812 | 0.914 |
| 22 | 0.644 | 0.711 |
| 24 | 0.511 | 0.559 |
Same number, different wire — SWG runs thicker than AWG. See the AWG guide for the full background.
Stranded vs solid conductors
- Single solid conductor — smallest overall diameter
- Lower cost; easy to terminate by IDC or in PCB holes
- Best for permanent, static installations
- Stiffer — can fatigue and break if repeatedly flexed
- Many fine strands — ~1.1–1.3× larger overall diameter
- Same copper area & ampacity at the same AWG
- Highly flexible — survives bending & vibration
- Standard for cable assemblies, harnesses, robotics & drag-chain
Same AWG = same cross-section and current rating; stranded simply trades a slightly larger diameter for flexibility. It's specified as equivalent solid AWG plus a strand count — e.g. 22 AWG 7/30 = seven strands of 30 AWG.
Glossary
- Ampacity
- The maximum continuous current a conductor can carry without exceeding its temperature rating.
- Circular mil (cmil)
- Area of a circle 0.001 in (one mil) in diameter — a US unit for conductor cross-section. 1 kcmil = 1,000 cmil.
- Voltage drop
- The loss of voltage along a conductor due to its resistance (V = k·I·R·L); typically kept under 3 % on a branch circuit.
- Resistivity (ρ)
- A material's intrinsic opposition to current. Copper ≈ 1.724×10⁻⁸ Ω·m at 20 °C; aluminum ≈ 2.826×10⁻⁸.
- Skin effect
- At higher AC frequencies, current crowds toward the conductor surface, raising effective resistance above the DC value.
- Derating
- Reducing a conductor's rated ampacity for high ambient temperature or for bundling several current-carrying conductors together.
AWG calculator — FAQ
What is AWG?
American Wire Gauge (AWG) is the standard U.S. system for specifying solid round conductor diameter. A lower AWG number is a thicker wire — every 6 gauges roughly halves or doubles the cross-sectional area.
How do I convert AWG to mm²?
Compute the diameter with d(mm)=0.127·92^((36−n)/39), then area = π/4·d². For example, 12 AWG ≈ 2.05 mm diameter ≈ 3.31 mm². Use the Convert tab above for any gauge.
What is the ampacity of 12 AWG copper?
Per NEC Table 310.16, 12 AWG copper is rated 20 A at 60 °C, 25 A at 75 °C and 30 A at 90 °C insulation, before ambient and bundling derating.
Copper vs aluminum — how much bigger does aluminum need to be?
Aluminum has ~1.6× the resistivity of copper, so an aluminum conductor carries less current for the same gauge — typically you go up about two AWG sizes to match a copper conductor's ampacity.
How do I size wire for voltage drop?
Use the Size-a-wire tab: enter current, run length, system voltage and a maximum %-drop. It returns the thinnest standard AWG whose drop stays within your limit, using R=ρL/A round-trip.
Need this gauge in a custom cable assembly?
Once you've sized your conductor, TeleWire Technology builds it into a custom cable assembly or wire harness to IPC/WHMA-A-620 — prototype to production, made in Taiwan.
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