Amp to Wire Size Calculator
Convert amps into a practical wire gauge (AWG) using common reference ampacity tables.
Your Wire Size Result
- Enter amps - Type the current you want the wire to carry.
- Pick copper/aluminum - Material affects ampacity and resistance.
- Pick the wiring method - NM-B cable (Romex) uses the 60°C column; THHN in conduit uses 75°C (NEC 334.80).
- Read the gauge - The calculator picks the smallest gauge meeting the input amps.
- Use voltage drop separately - Long runs may need upsizing even if ampacity is sufficient.
Match the amps to the smallest gauge that carries them: 15 amps to 14 AWG, 20 amps to 12 AWG, 30 amps to 10 AWG, 40 to 50 amps to 8 AWG copper (6 AWG for NM-B cable). These are copper in conduit at the 75 degree column. Two rules keep the answer honest, and this tool applies both: NEC 240.4(D) never lets 14, 12, or 10 AWG copper exceed a 15, 20, or 30 amp breaker, and NEC 334.80 sizes NM-B cable from the 60 degree column. Enter your amps and wiring method above.
Amps to Gauge at a Glance
Amps to Wire Size: What This Tool Does
This page is a quick ampacity-to-gauge lookup. Enter amps and select copper or aluminum, and the calculator returns a smallest wire size that meets the input using a simplified planning table.
It's designed for fast comparisons, not final design. Breaker sizes come in standard steps and some loads are treated as continuous, so the “right” breaker and wire can be one size higher depending on the scenario.
Example: a 30A circuit may map to a common copper gauge, but if the run is long the voltage drop may drive you to upsize. Use this with the Voltage Drop Calculator when distance is significant.
Amp‑to‑Wire Size vs Wire Size: What's the Difference?
Both tools point you to a practical AWG range, but they start from different inputs and are used at different stages.
Use Amp‑to‑Wire Size for quick planning: you have amps and want a starting gauge in seconds.
Use Wire Size when you want more context (material choice, wiring method, and related sizing checks like voltage drop).
If you are building a full circuit plan, a common flow is: Watts/Amps/Volts → Electrical Load → Breaker Size → Wire Size → Voltage Drop.
Typical Amps for Common Devices (Quick Planning)
| Device | Watts | Voltage | Approx. amps |
|---|---|---|---|
| Space heater | 1500 W | 120 V | 12.5 A |
| Microwave | 1200 W | 120 V | 10.0 A |
| Electric kettle | 1500 W | 120 V | 12.5 A |
| Small water heater | 3500 W | 240 V | 14.6 A |
| EV charger (Level 2) | 7200 W | 240 V | 30.0 A |
These are rough conversions (PF assumed 1.0). Use the Electrical Load Calculator when summing many items.
Fast Lookups (Copper & Aluminum, Conduit 75°C)
| Amps | Copper (THHN, conduit) | Aluminum (THHN, conduit) |
|---|---|---|
| 15 A | 14 AWG | 12 AWG |
| 20 A | 12 AWG | 10 AWG |
| 30 A | 10 AWG | 8 AWG |
| 40 A | 8 AWG | 8 AWG |
| 50 A | 8 AWG | 6 AWG |
Copper in conduit at the 75°C column, matching this calculator default. For NM-B cable (Romex) size one column cooler at 60°C: a 50 A circuit becomes 6 AWG copper. Remember NEC 240.4(D) caps 14/12/10 AWG copper at 15/20/30 A breakers.
Starter Gauge Logic (Amp → AWG)
This tool gives a fast starting gauge from your amps. It is intentionally conservative and meant for early planning.
Wiring method = NM-B cable uses the 60°C column, THHN in conduit the 75°C - the tool sets this from your selection
Sanity checks = Confirm breaker size and voltage drop before you buy materials
For a full circuit plan (multiple loads, phases, long distance), use Electrical Load and Voltage Drop calculators too.
Code Notes & Sources
- Ampacities follow NEC Table 310.16 for copper and aluminum. The 240.4(D) small-conductor rule then caps overcurrent protection at 15, 20, and 30 amps for 14, 12, and 10 AWG copper regardless of the table value, and this tool enforces it.NFPA 70 (NEC) Table 310.16 and 240.4(D)
- NM-B cable is sized from the 60 degree column even though its insulation is rated 90, so the wiring-method selector changes the recommended gauge.NFPA 70 (NEC) 334.80 - NM Cable Ampacity
Next Steps
A starting gauge is not the whole circuit. Confirm the rest:
Related Calculators
Amps drive both wire gauge and breaker selection. Browse the electrical calculator collection.