Wire Gauge Calculator Canada – AWG & Metric Sizing

⚡ Wire Gauge Calculator Canada

AWG & metric sizing, ampacity, voltage drop & conduit fill — CEC compliant

📌 Quick Presets
⚙️ Calculator Inputs
⚠️ Note: Aluminum wiring requires special connectors rated for aluminum and anti-oxidant compound at all terminations (CEC Rule 12-108).
✅ Calculation Results
⚠️ Important: All electrical work in Canada must comply with the Canadian Electrical Code (CEC / CSA C22.1). In most provinces, permits and licensed electrician inspections are required for new circuits. This calculator is for estimation and educational purposes only. Always consult a licensed electrician.
📊 AWG Wire Properties Reference
14 AWG
Min Branch Circuit
1.63mm
14 AWG Diameter
3%
Max Voltage Drop (CEC)
90°C
T90 / RW90 Rating
🧮 Copper Wire Ampacity Table (CEC Table 2 – 90°C)
AWG / kcmil Diam. (mm) Area (mm²) Resist. (Ω/km) Ampacity 90°C (A) Ampacity 75°C (A) Metric Equiv.
14 AWG1.632.088.28620152.5 mm²
12 AWG2.053.315.20925204 mm²
10 AWG2.595.263.27740306 mm²
8 AWG3.268.372.061554010 mm²
6 AWG4.1113.301.296755516 mm²
4 AWG5.1921.150.815957025 mm²
3 AWG5.8326.670.6461108535 mm²
2 AWG6.5433.620.5131309535 mm²
1 AWG7.3542.410.40715011050 mm²
1/0 AWG8.2553.490.32217012550 mm²
2/0 AWG9.2767.430.25619514570 mm²
3/0 AWG10.4085.010.20322516595 mm²
4/0 AWG11.68107.20.161260195120 mm²
250 kcmil12.70126.70.136290215150 mm²
350 kcmil15.01177.40.097350260185 mm²
🧮 Aluminum Wire Ampacity (CEC – 90°C)
AWG / kcmil Diam. (mm) Area (mm²) Resist. (Ω/km) Ampacity 90°C (A) Ampacity 75°C (A) Typical Use
12 AWG2.053.318.5641515Lighting (not recommended)
10 AWG2.595.265.3842520Small appliances
8 AWG3.268.373.3873025Dryer, water heater
6 AWG4.1113.302.1294030Range, large appliance
4 AWG5.1921.151.3395540Sub-panel feed
2 AWG6.5433.620.8427555100A service entrance
1/0 AWG8.2553.490.52910075100–125A service
2/0 AWG9.2767.430.42011590125A service
3/0 AWG10.4085.010.333135100150A service
4/0 AWG11.68107.20.264155120200A service (main)
350 kcmil15.01177.40.159210155200A+ service
📋 Voltage Drop Reference Table (Copper, 120V, Single Phase)
AWG 15A / 50ft 15A / 100ft 20A / 50ft 20A / 100ft 30A / 50ft 30A / 100ft
14 AWG1.86%3.72%2.48%4.96%
12 AWG1.17%2.34%1.56%3.13%2.34%4.69%
10 AWG0.74%1.48%0.98%1.97%1.47%2.95%
8 AWG0.46%0.93%0.62%1.24%0.93%1.86%
6 AWG0.29%0.59%0.39%0.78%0.59%1.17%
4 AWG0.18%0.37%0.24%0.49%0.37%0.74%
💡 Common Canadian Circuits Quick Reference
Application Breaker Min Cu Wire Min Al Wire Voltage CEC Rule
Lighting / outlets15A14 AWGNot rec.120V14-010
Kitchen small appliance20A12 AWGNot rec.120V26-712
Bathroom GFCI20A12 AWGNot rec.120V26-714
Washer20A12 AWGNot rec.120V26-720
Electric dryer30A10 AWG8 AWG240V26-744
Electric range40A8 AWG6 AWG240V26-744
EV charger (L2)40–50A8–6 AWG6–4 AWG240V86-306
Central A/C30–60A10–6 AWG8–4 AWG240V28-106
Hot water heater30A10 AWG8 AWG240V26-746
100A sub-panel100A3 AWG Cu1/0 AWG240V14-012
200A service200A3/0 AWG Cu4/0 AWG240V6-200
🔧 Conduit Fill Reference (EMT – 40% Max Fill)
Conduit Size Area (in²) 40% Fill (in²) Max 14 AWG Max 12 AWG Max 10 AWG Max 8 AWG
1/2 in EMT0.3040.1229752
3/4 in EMT0.5330.213161284
1 in EMT0.8640.3462620137
1-1/4 in EMT1.4960.59845342312
1-1/2 in EMT2.0360.81461463116
2 in EMT3.3561.342100765127
📖 CEC Voltage Drop Rule: The Canadian Electrical Code recommends a maximum 3% voltage drop for branch circuits and 5% total from service entrance to the most remote outlet. For runs over 30m (100ft), always check voltage drop and upsize if needed.
📖 Derating for Multiple Conductors: When more than 3 current-carrying conductors share a conduit or cable, ampacity must be derated: 4–6 conductors = 80%, 7–9 = 70%, 10–20 = 50%, per CEC Table 5C. Neutral conductors carrying only harmonic currents count toward the total.

The rating of wires is a basic measuring method that informs you about the thickness of wire. You seriously need to understand the rating of wire uses, because it shows how much current wire can handle without overheating. There is not only one way to measure the thickness of wire; one uses the AWG system in North America the more ancient SWG (British standard) and the metric way to measure the cross-section area in square millimeters.

In United States the AWG system, or American wire Rating, is the usual standard for finding wire size. It comes from 1857 and was created to set up a uniform system about the diameter of round, solid wires from non-iron, well conducting materials. The official details appear in the ASTM standard B 258.

What Wire Ratings Mean

In North America people depend much on AWG for electrical wire and calbe production.

Here is where things become unlikely. In the AWG system a lower rating number points to actually thicker wire, not vice versa. A higher number shows that the wire becomes thinner.

Like this 12-rated wire is actually thicker than 18-rated. With higher numbers the diameter shrinks. That happens because the system is based on a logarithmic scale, so the sizes decline gradually instead of in equal steps.

The reason that this system works like this comes directly from the way that one makes wires. One draws a metal rod through a plate for drawing and while it exits the other side, it becomes a bit narrower then before. Here is a short description of cold pushing in practice.

The rating of wires has real presence when one works with electrical wiring. Choosing too thin a wire can cause overheating or even trigger fire. Vice versa, thick wire costs more each meter and adds weight.

A 10-rated wire weighs about 31 pounds for 1000 feet, while 12-rated comes in around 20 pounds for same length. One must also consider voltage drop. For 12-rated wire at around 40 feet the drop is maybe 0.2 volts.

If one uses thin wire, the situation gets bad quickly, 14-rated drops to around 0.3 volts, 16-rated to 0.5 and 20-rated gives roughly 1.2 volt drop.

To measure wire one does not need fancy tools. There are physical gauges, round or oval metal plates with notches on the edge, that match with various wire sizes. Each notch has a number and one simply lays the wire in the right space.

Calipers work just as well, if one wants to measure the diameter directly.

wire insulating covers are stamped with letter codes, that show important details like the type of material, the rating and the voltage limit. The National Electrical Code uses this letter coding, so anyone can quickly figure out the skill of wire. THHN, XHHW and THW are common kinds.

For usual home circuits 12-ratedwire works well until one deals with heavy devices.

Wire Gauge Calculator Canada – AWG & Metric Sizing

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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