What Is the Voltage Drop for 2/0 AWG at 8A and 500 Feet?
Running 8A through 2/0 AWG copper for 500 feet on a single-phase / DC circuit produces a 0.7736-volt drop. On a 120V source that is 0.6447%; on 240V it is 0.3223%. NEC 210.19(A) Informational Note 4 recommends keeping branch-circuit drop at or below 3% and total feeder+branch drop at or below 5%, these are performance recommendations, not code requirements.
Use this citation when referencing this page.
Circuit basis: This uses the single-phase / DC round-trip formula (factor of 2) for the voltage drop across the two circuit conductors. For a three-phase line-to-line run use the three-phase version of the page (append ?type=3ph). Switch to the three-phase version →
Assumes a 120V source on a single-phase / DC circuit. Use the circuit-basis link above to switch between single-phase/DC and three-phase.
Voltage Drop Formula (single-phase / DC)
Vdrop = (2 × L × I × R) ÷ 1000
DC and single-phase AC use the round-trip factor of 2. Current travels out to the load on one conductor and returns on another.
For a three-phase circuit at the same amps and distance, see the three-phase version (uses √3 instead of 2, so the drop is about 13.4% lower).
Percentage
%VD = (Vdrop ÷ Vsource) × 100
How This Estimate Changes with Run Length and Gauge
Gauge Check
2/0 AWG clears the 3% drop target at these inputs. A smaller conductor may also meet it with less margin. See the minimum gauge for this load and distance.
Impact of Distance
Voltage drop is proportional to distance. Here is 2/0 AWG at 8A at different distances:
| Distance | Drop (V) | % on 120V | % on 240V | NEC (120V) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25ft | 0.0387V | 0.0322% | 0.0161% | OK |
| 50ft | 0.0774V | 0.0645% | 0.0322% | OK |
| 75ft | 0.116V | 0.0967% | 0.0483% | OK |
| 100ft | 0.1547V | 0.1289% | 0.0645% | OK |
| 150ft | 0.2321V | 0.1934% | 0.0967% | OK |
| 200ft | 0.3094V | 0.2579% | 0.1289% | OK |
| 300ft | 0.4642V | 0.3868% | 0.1934% | OK |
Same Run, Different Wire Gauges
How does wire gauge affect voltage drop for 8A at 500 feet on 120V single-phase / DC? Only gauges whose branch-circuit OCP cap is at or above the 8A load are listed, since thinner gauges would fail the ampacity check before drop even matters.