What Wire Size for 200 Amps at 200 Feet?
For a 200-amp circuit running 200 feet on 120V, 250 kcmil copper is the smallest gauge in our table that both stays within the 3% drop target and covers the branch-circuit OCP cap for 200A. A shorter run of 100 feet at the same voltage often allows 3/0 AWG. Treat this as an estimate, not an install spec.
Use this citation when referencing this page.
Assumes a 120V source on a three-phase L-L circuit and a 3% voltage-drop target. Each material is picked independently against the same target, so the copper and aluminum results are two separate recommendations, not an ampacity equivalence. Switch to single-phase / DC →
How Wire Size Is Determined
Step 1: NEC Branch-Circuit Ampacity
The conductor needs to carry at least 200A without going past its temperature rating, and the OCP protecting it needs to respect the NEC branch-circuit cap. Under the typical assumptions used in this table (copper, 75°C termination, no bundling or ambient derates), 250 kcmil sits at a branch-circuit OCP of 255A. That is not a universal number: NM-B cable (Romex) follows the 60°C column in residential use per NEC 334.80 (250 kcmil NM-B = 215A), bundling more than three current-carrying conductors requires a 310.15(C)(1) adjustment, ambient temperatures above 30°C require a 310.15(B) correction, and 60°C terminations on typical residential equipment can pull the usable value lower still. Use the nameplate and local code for the actual install value.
Step 2: Voltage Drop Check
%VD = (√3 × L × I × R) ÷ (1000 × V) × 100 (three-phase L-L; √3 factor)
NEC 210.19(A) Informational Note 4 recommends ≤ 3% for branch circuits and ≤ 5% for feeder + branch total as performance targets, not hard code requirements. This run sits within the 3% target used for this calculation.
Practical Information
What If You Go One Size Smaller?
Using 4/0 AWG (one size thinner) at these inputs gives a voltage drop of 4.21V (3.51% on 120V), and its branch-circuit OCP cap under typical conditions is 230A.
Limiting factor here: voltage drop, not ampacity. 4/0 AWG is still above the 200A load at its 230A branch-circuit OCP cap, so the conductor temperature margin is fine for this run. What pushes it off this page's pick is the 3.51% drop sitting past the 3% target, which is a performance recommendation (NEC 210.19(A) Informational Note 4), not a code requirement. On shorter runs or at higher source voltage the same gauge would often clear the drop target too.
What If You Go One Size Larger?
Using 300 kcmil (one size thicker) would reduce voltage drop to 2.97V (2.48% on 120V). More expensive wire but better performance and more headroom for future load increases.
Wattage at This Amperage
200A at 120V delivers 24,000 watts (DC / resistive load). See conversion.