Voltage Drop Calculator for Flickering Lights

Calculate voltage drop in your electrical circuit to diagnose flickering lights. A voltage drop greater than 3% (NEC recommendation) or 5% (maximum allowable) often causes flickering, dimming, or premature bulb failure.

Total amperage drawn by the light fixture(s)
Distance from panel/source to the fixture (one way)

Formulas Used

Wire Resistance:

R = (ρ × Ltotal) / CM

  • ρ = Resistivity at 75°C: Copper = 12.9 Ω·cmil/ft, Aluminum = 21.2 Ω·cmil/ft
  • Ltotal = 2 × one-way length (single-phase) or √3 × one-way length (three-phase)
  • CM = Circular mils of the selected wire gauge

Voltage Drop:

VD = I × R

Voltage Drop Percentage:

VD% = (VD / Vsource) × 100

Required Circular Mils (for ≤ 3% drop):

CMrequired = (ρ × Ltotal × I) / (0.03 × Vsource)

Assumptions & References

  • Wire resistivity values are based on 75°C conductor temperature per NEC Table 9 (standard for most residential/commercial wiring calculations).
  • The NEC (NFPA 70) recommends ≤ 3% voltage drop on branch circuits and ≤ 5% total (feeder + branch). Exceeding these thresholds is a common cause of flickering lights.
  • Single-phase calculations use 2× the one-way length to account for both the hot and neutral conductors.
  • Three-phase calculations use √3 × one-way length (line-to-neutral factor for balanced loads).
  • Circular mil values are from standard AWG tables (ASTM B3 / NEC Chapter 9, Table 8).
  • This calculator assumes solid or stranded copper/aluminum conductors at normal operating temperature. Actual resistance may vary with temperature, conduit fill, and conductor bundling.
  • Flickering can also be caused by loose connections, load switching, utility supply issues, or incompatible dimmers — voltage drop is one contributing factor.
  • Reference: NFPA 70 National Electrical Code, Article 210 & 215; IEEE Std 1100 (Emerald Book).

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