LED Wire Gauge Calculator: Find the Right Wire Size

💡 LED Wire Gauge Calculator

Find the correct wire size for LED strips, fixtures, and lighting systems — enter your voltage, current, and run length for instant results.

Quick Presets
🔧 Wiring Inputs
✅ Wire Gauge Results
📊 AWG Wire Properties Reference
10 AWG
Max 30A (Copper)
14 AWG
Max 15A (Copper)
18 AWG
Max 10A (Copper)
22 AWG
Max 5A (Copper)
📋 AWG Copper Wire Specifications
AWG Diameter (mm) Area (mm²) Resistance (Ω/100ft) Max Amps (Free Air) Typical LED Use
10 AWG2.5885.260.10030AMain power feed, large systems
12 AWG2.0533.310.15920AHigh-power commercial LED
14 AWG1.6282.080.25315ALong runs 24V high power
16 AWG1.2911.310.40213AMedium LED strips, 24V systems
18 AWG1.0240.8230.63910AStandard 12V/24V LED strips
20 AWG0.8120.5181.0157.5AShort 12V strips, RGB data
22 AWG0.6440.3241.6145ALow-power accent lighting
24 AWG0.5110.2052.5673.5ASignal wires, very short runs
26 AWG0.4050.1294.0812.2AData/signal only
28 AWG0.3210.08106.4900.83AMicro LED, signal
🔌 Voltage Drop by Run Length & Gauge (12V, 5A, Copper)
AWG 10 ft (3 m) 20 ft (6 m) 30 ft (9 m) 50 ft (15 m) Pass/Fail @ 3%
12 AWG0.16V (1.3%)0.32V (2.7%)0.48V (4.0%)0.80V (6.7%)✔ ≤20ft
14 AWG0.25V (2.1%)0.51V (4.2%)0.76V (6.3%)1.27V (10.6%)✔ ≤15ft
16 AWG0.40V (3.3%)0.80V (6.7%)1.21V (10.0%)2.01V (16.8%)✔ ≤8ft
18 AWG0.64V (5.3%)1.28V (10.6%)1.92V (16.0%)3.19V (26.6%)⚠ ≤5ft
20 AWG1.02V (8.4%)2.03V (16.9%)3.05V (25.4%)❌ Too small
🧮 Metric Wire Sizes vs AWG Equivalents
Metric (mm²) AWG Equivalent Max Amps Resistance (Ω/100m) Common Application
6.0 mm²≈10 AWG32A0.315Main DC feed
4.0 mm²≈12 AWG25A0.473High-power LED
2.5 mm²≈14 AWG18A0.750Commercial strips
1.5 mm²≈16 AWG13A1.24Standard LED runs
1.0 mm²≈18 AWG10A1.8312V/24V LED strips
0.75 mm²≈20 AWG7A2.44Short LED runs
0.5 mm²≈20-22 AWG5A3.66Low power accent
0.35 mm²≈22 AWG3A5.24Signal & data
💡 Common LED Project Wiring Guide
Project Type Voltage Typical Current Recommended AWG Notes
Under-cabinet strips12V2–5A18 AWGUp to 10ft run
Bedroom accent strip12V1–3A20 AWGUp to 8ft run
Landscape path lights12V5–10A14–16 AWG20–50ft typical
Commercial LED sign24V10–20A12 AWGLong runs common
Automotive interior12V2–8A18 AWGShort runs
Grow light setup24V5–15A14–16 AWGCheck derating
RGB LED controller12–24V3–6A/ch18 AWG per chEach color channel
High bay warehouse48V5–15A12–14 AWGLong feeder runs
📐 Tip: Round Up, Never Down. Always select the next larger standard wire gauge when calculations fall between sizes. A slightly oversized wire runs cooler, has lower voltage drop, and provides headroom for future load additions. For LED strips specifically, brightness uniformity depends on keeping voltage drop under 3%.
📏 Tip: Total Circuit Length = Wire Out + Wire Back. Voltage drop calculations require the total conductor length — wire going TO the load plus the return wire. For a 10ft LED strip run, your total wire length is 20ft (10ft each way). Always use round-trip distance in your calculations.
⚠ Always wear appropriate safety equipment. Never exceed the maximum rated ampacity of your wire gauge for the installation type. De-rate wire capacity by 20–30% when wiring is enclosed, bundled, or run in conduit. Verify all connections comply with local electrical codes before energizing.

Choosing the right size for LED wire seems easy, until you genuinely start to involve yourself with it. The American system of wire sizes, AWG for short, shows the sizes of wires, and here is the spot: a low number of AWG means thicker wire. That thicker wire is able to bear bigger power that flows through it.

Well does this choice genuinely matter, because it separates good and well working use of that, that will cause problems later.

How to Choose the Right Wire Size for LED Lights

Two things affect the decision about size: how many amps your LEDs consume and how far long the wire must extend. The longer the distances from the power source to the LED strips the bigger must be the size to make up for the voltage drop. This voltage drop should not pass 3 percent between the power source and the place, where the LEDs sit.

Worth noting, that both the positive and the ground wire experience this drop likewise, because both bear the same electricity.

For the most common home LED setups with short distances and small power needs, LED wire of 20 to 22 AWG well bears low-power tasks, if it does not pass ten feet. If you consume under two or three amps and the way is shorter than ten feet, then 18 to 20 AWG should work without problems. During setup of LED general lighting or similar low-voltage devices, commonly one uses insulated 18-2 or 16-2 cable, according to the needs of the wire way.

Here it becomes interesting. Smaller diameter of wire causes bigger resistance, what limits the skill to bare electricity over any distance. The advantage?

Almost never wrong to use thicker wire than strictly needed. If there is doubt about the real load, then choosing thicker wire always is the safer choice.

For wire ways that consume around ten amps, 16 AWG reaches the ideal minimum. At a load of only five amps, 18 AWG works for the task. Some wires of LED strips and their connections already use 18 or 20 AWG, so simply matching the size with that of the pigtail of the device is good for ways under twenty feet.

Two-conductor LED wire of 18 AWG well works for connecting single-color 24V LED light to the power.

When the ways become longer, you need more careful planning. If you extend 50 feet of 16 AWG, then maybe you only can use even strips, before the voltage drop becomes the main trouble. For 10-amp DC load in 12 volts with total wire length of five metres, something around 12 AWG usually keeps the situation under control.

Copper LED wire of 12 AWG keeps the voltage drop under three percent, while 14 AWG reaches right the limit, more near 3.5 to 4 percent loss. Spreading the power each metre or so along long strips helps to escape the dimming, that you would notice at the far end.

LED lighting consumes much less electricity compared to old bulbs. If you lay LED lighting on a normal 15-amp circuit with 14 AWG wire, then overload becomes almost impossible. The choice ofwire always must depend on the current demands of your total loads.

LED Wire Gauge Calculator: Find the Right Wire Size

Author

  • Thomas Martinez

    Hi, I am Thomas Martinez, the owner of ToolCroze.com! As a passionate DIY enthusiast and a firm believer in the power of quality tools, I created this platform to share my knowledge and experiences with fellow craftsmen and handywomen alike.

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