Wire ResistanceCalculator
Estimate conductor resistance from conductor size, material, temperature, and run length before you size the circuit.
Estimate conductor resistance from size, material, temperature, length, and parallel sets, then turn that resistance into a quick voltage-drop and power-loss check. This tool is intentionally grounded in DC resistance. It is useful for planning, submittal review, and troubleshooting, but final AC design should still consider impedance, power factor, raceway conditions, terminations, and code ampacity rules.
Calculator Inputs
Resistance first, voltage-drop check second
Results
Temperature-adjusted resistance estimate
Resistance rises with conductor temperature. A quick room-temperature assumption can materially understate drop on long loaded feeders or secondary runs.
This page estimates conductor resistance and resistive drop only. It does not replace a full AC impedance study, fault-duty review, or NEC ampacity check.
How To Use This Tool
Start with the actual installed one-way length, choose the conductor material and size, then set a realistic conductor temperature. If parallel sets are planned, the calculator reduces the effective resistance per set. Add current and source voltage when you want the resistance estimate converted into a practical voltage-drop and watt-loss check.
Use the adjusted ohms per 1000 ft and one-conductor resistance outputs to verify your base planning assumptions.
For DC and single-phase, focus on round-trip resistance. For three-phase, use the dedicated drop factor shown here.
Once resistance looks acceptable, move into the full voltage-drop and conductor sizing calculators before issuing a final design.
Related Tools
Continue from resistance planning into full voltage-drop, sizing, reference, and code pages.
AC Voltage Drop Calculator
Use the full AC workflow when impedance, phase, and final drop percentage matter.
DC Voltage Drop Calculator
Apply the same conductor data to batteries, controls, and low-voltage DC runs.
Wire Size Calculator
Move from resistance and voltage loss to a practical conductor recommendation.
Wire Tables
Compare resistance and ampacity values across common AWG and kcmil sizes.
NEC Standards
Review code context before turning a resistance estimate into a final design decision.