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Free tool · RV & van electrical

What gauge wire does your 12V DC circuit need?

The answer a static chart can't give you, because it doesn't know your run length. Enter your load, distance, and voltage, and get the AWG that satisfies both voltage drop and ampacity, with the fuse to match. NEC-based DC sizing for RV, van, automotive, and off-grid 12, 24, and 48 volt builds.

Read first: undersized wire overheats and is a real fire risk, so this tool sizes conservatively and rounds up. It is a planning guide built on accepted NEC-based DC sizing, not a substitute for the code or a licensed electrician, and it sizes the conductor and a fuse window only, not your full circuit protection. It assumes 105°C fine-strand copper (battery, welding, or quality marine cable). Confirm any wire you install against the NEC and your equipment manuals, and when in doubt, go heavier.

Your circuit

NEC-based DC sizing for 105°C copper. Sizes the conductor and a fuse window only. Confirm against the NEC before installing, and when in doubt, size up.

How to size 12V DC wire

The calculator above is just this six-step method. You can run it by hand.

Step 1: Size for voltage drop and ampacity, then take the larger

A DC wire has to pass two tests, and you use whichever needs the bigger gauge. Voltage drop governs long runs at modest current; ampacity (the heat the wire can shed without cooking its insulation) governs short, high-current runs like an inverter feed or a winch. A chart can only show ampacity because it cannot know your run length, and a calculator that checks only voltage drop will happily undersize a short 150-amp run, which is how wires start fires. This tool runs both and tells you which one won.

Step 2: Measure the round trip, not the one-way distance

Current flows out to the device and back through the ground, so the resistance that drops your voltage is the full there-and-back length of wire. The single most common mistake is sizing off the one-way distance, which halves the resistance in the math and leaves you a gauge or two too thin. Enter the one-way run from the battery or busbar to the device and the tool doubles it for you.

Step 3: Hold critical circuits to 3 percent, the rest to 10

Keep voltage drop under 3 percent on circuits where it matters: the solar array and its run to the controller, the controller-to-battery run, a 12V fridge, a water pump, and any inverter feed. Non-critical loads like cabin lights and USB outlets can run to 10 percent. A fridge or pump on a sagging 10 percent circuit underperforms exactly when the battery is already low, so when in doubt design to 3 percent. This tool uses the standard copper constant with margin for warm wire (K = 11.1, a step more conservative than the marine 10.75); a long run sitting in real heat near full load still drops a little more than any formula shows, so leave headroom there.

Step 4: Derate for heat and crowding

Wire carries less current when it is hot or packed in with other wires. Bundle four to six current-carrying conductors in a loom or conduit and each is derated to about 80 percent; seven or more drops to about 70 percent (NEC 310.15). A run through a hot engine bay, a sun-baked attic, or a wall cavity above roughly 50C loses about another 15 percent. For DC, both the positive and the negative count as current-carrying. Pick the routing that matches your worst stretch; the tool applies the derate to the ampacity side.

Step 5: Round up, never below 16 AWG, and use the right wire

Wire comes in steps, so when the math lands between two gauges you take the larger. Heavier wire runs cooler and drops less voltage for a few dollars more; there is no upside to shaving it. Keep a floor of 16 AWG for general RV and van wiring because thinner wire is too fragile for road vibration, and use fine-strand copper, not solid. Buy wire rated to 105C (battery and welding cable, quality marine wire); common house THHN is only 90C and carries less, and AWG-rated wire is not the same as cheaper SAE wire, which has about 10 percent less copper for the same gauge number.

Step 6: Fuse the wire, not the load

A fuse or breaker protects the conductor, so its rating sits at or below the wire's derated ampacity and at or above the current it serves. For a load that runs three hours or more (continuous), NEC sizes the protection and the wire to 125 percent of the load. Solar array-output conductors are a special case: size them to 156 percent of the panels' short-circuit current (NEC 690.8). Small conductors have hard caps regardless of their ampacity: roughly 10 A for 16 AWG, 15 A for 14, 20 A for 12, 30 A for 10 (NEC 240.4(D)). The golden rule: if your load needs more current than the wire can carry, upsize the wire, never the fuse.

12V DC wire ampacity chart (105°C copper)

Allowable current for a single 105°C copper conductor in free air, and a derated figure for wire bundled in a loom or run through a hot location. This is the ampacity half of the sizing; the voltage-drop half depends on your run length and voltage, which the calculator works out.

AWG Free air (A) Bundled or hot (~70%) (A)
16 25 18
14 35 25
12 45 31
10 60 42
8 80 56
6 120 84
4 160 112
3 180 126
2 210 147
1 245 172
1/0 285 200
2/0 330 231
3/0 385 270
4/0 445 312

Wiring the rest of the system

Once the gauge is sized, here is the gear it connects.

Sizing the whole system? Start with the RV Solar & Battery Calculator. Wiring a boat instead? Use the Marine DC Wire-Gauge Calculator (it follows ABYC E-11 and uses a less conservative constant, so it can return a thinner wire; don't use its result for a hot RV, engine-bay, or attic run).

How we are paid: some links above go to Amazon, and if you buy through them we earn a commission at no extra cost to you. It does not change what we recommend.

Common questions

What size wire do I need for a given load and distance?

Size it two ways and take the larger. First for voltage drop, using the round-trip length and your system voltage, because thin wire over a long run loses too much voltage. Second for ampacity, the current the wire can carry without overheating. Long runs are usually limited by voltage drop; short high-current runs like an inverter feed are limited by ampacity. Enter your load in amps or watts, the one-way run, the voltage, and the circuit type above, and the calculator runs both checks and tells you which one governs.

Why does the calculator double my run length?

Because current flows out to the device and back to the battery, so the resistance that causes voltage drop is the full round-trip length of wire, both the positive and the ground conductor. If you size off the one-way distance you halve the resistance in the math and end up a gauge or two too thin. Enter the one-way distance from the source to the device and the tool doubles it.

What is voltage drop, and why 3 percent versus 10 percent?

Voltage drop is the voltage lost to the resistance of the wire between the battery and the device. The accepted convention holds critical circuits to 3 percent (the solar array and its runs, a 12V fridge, a water pump, an inverter feed) and allows non-critical ones like cabin lighting and USB up to 10 percent. The reason to favor 3 percent is that a low-voltage device underperforms: a slow pump, a fridge that struggles, electronics that brown out, exactly when the battery is already down. When in doubt, design to 3 percent.

What size fuse do I need, and can I just use a bigger one?

The fuse protects the wire, not the device, so its rating must stay at or below the wire's derated ampacity, and at or above the current the circuit draws. The calculator suggests the smallest standard size in that window. You cannot fix an undersized wire with a bigger fuse: if the load needs more current than the wire can carry, the answer is heavier wire, never a larger fuse. Small conductors also have hard NEC caps (about 10 A for 16 AWG, 15 for 14, 20 for 12, 30 for 10) regardless of their raw ampacity. The suggestion here is advisory, so confirm against the NEC and your gear.

Does the wire size change in a hot engine bay or a bundle?

Yes. A conductor crammed in a loom or conduit with others, or run through a hot engine bay, attic, or wall cavity, sheds heat poorly and is derated. Bundle four to six current-carrying wires and each carries about 80 percent of its free-air rating; seven or more drops to about 70 percent (NEC 310.15). A location above roughly 50C costs about another 15 percent. The calculator has a routing option that applies this to the ampacity side, so pick the setting that matches the worst stretch of the run.

Is RV or automotive wire different from house wire?

Yes. A 12V DC build uses fine-strand copper, not solid, because solid wire fatigues and breaks under road vibration, and you want wire rated to 105C such as battery, welding, or quality marine cable. Common household THHN is only rated to 90C and carries less current for the same gauge. Watch the rating system too: buy AWG-rated wire, not SAE-rated, which packs about 10 percent less copper for the same gauge number and will not match these tables.

How is solar wiring different from a normal DC load?

Solar array-output conductors carry a special sizing rule. Because panel current can run above its rated value when the sun is brighter than the lab test, NEC 690.8 sizes those conductors and their protection to 156 percent of the panels' short-circuit current (a 1.25 irradiance factor times a 1.25 continuous factor). That is more than a normal DC load of the same nominal amps, so size array wiring up accordingly; the runs after the charge controller follow the ordinary DC rules this tool uses.

Does this replace the NEC or a licensed electrician?

No. It is a planning guide that implements accepted NEC-based DC sizing to get you to the right gauge and help you shop and understand a quote, not a substitute for the code or for a qualified electrician. It sizes the conductor and suggests a fuse window, but it cannot see your terminations, your real ambient temperature, corrosion, or an unusual heat source, and it does not size your full overcurrent protection. Confirm any wire you intend to install against the NEC and your equipment's instructions, and when in doubt, go heavier.

Sources & further reading

The numbers here follow accepted NEC-based DC practice. Verify against the code for any installation.

Disclaimer

This calculator provides DC wire-sizing estimates based on accepted NEC-derived practice for 105°C copper conductors in RV, van, automotive, and off-grid systems. It is not a substitute for the National Electrical Code, RVIA standards, or a licensed electrician. It sizes the conductor and suggests a fuse window only; it does not size your full overcurrent-protection scheme, which is a separate requirement, and solar array-output conductors carry their own NEC 690.8 rule. Results must not be the sole basis for an installation: any wire size selected here should be reviewed for adequacy before installation by a qualified professional applying the applicable standards. This tool does not account for heated or corroded terminations, wiring errors, data-entry errors, your real ambient temperature, defective insulation, or overcurrent-protection sizing. Sorted Gear expressly disclaims responsibility for any use of this calculator that results in inadequate wire size or circuit protection. Consult a qualified electrician for final installations, and when in doubt, size up. Last reviewed June 2026.

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