0.75 mm² to AWG

0.75 mm² equals
18 AWG
closest AWG: 18 AWG · precise AWG cross-section: 0.823 mm²

18 AWG (0.75 mm²) is the thinnest standard cable still considered "wiring" in DC systems — below it, you are into signal-wire and pre-tinned BMS-cable territory. It handles small loads under 7 A: indicator LEDs, low-power dome lights, sensor feeds, and the trigger sides of relays. In stocked metric markets, 0.75 mm² is the smallest cable typically sold off the spool, available alongside 1.0 mm² and 1.5 mm². Anything below 0.75 mm² is usually multi-conductor sheathed cable for trailer plugs or sensor harnesses.

All values on this page assume copper conductors at 20°C ambient. Aluminum has ~60% higher resistance for the same cross-section and is generally not recommended for low-voltage DC.

Cross-section
0.75 mm²
0.823 mm² precise IEC
Ampacity
7 A
copper, chassis, 20°C
Max Fuse
7 A
Blade (ATC)
Resistance
23.20 mΩ/m
copper at 20°C

Calculate for your specific cable run

The tables below assume 18 AWG (0.75 mm²) copper. Use the calculator to confirm this gauge is correct for your exact load and length, or get a different gauge recommendation if needed.

V
0V48V
A
0A200A

= 60W

m
0m30m

= 16.4 ft (one way, round-trip calculated automatically)

Advanced Settings

Result

Wire size meets all requirements.
Recommended Wire
2.5 mm²
13 AWG
Voltage Drop
0.36V
3.0% of 12V
Power Loss
1.8W
Resistance
71.4

Fuse Size

Fuse Size
7.5A
Fuse Type
Blade (ATC/ATO)
Standard automotive blade fuse. Place inline near the power source.
Always place the fuse as close to the power source (battery) as possible. The fuse protects the wire, not the load.

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Wire Gauge
2.5mm²
Fuse Size
7.5A
Voltage Drop
3.0%
Power Loss
1.8W

18 AWG Voltage Drop at 12V DC

Round-trip voltage drop for 18 AWG (0.75 mm²) copper wire at 20°C ambient. Cells highlighted in yellow exceed the 3% target; red cells exceed 5% and are not recommended.

Current1 m / 3 ft2 m / 7 ft3 m / 10 ft5 m / 16 ft7 m / 23 ft
1 A0.046 V (0.39%)0.093 V (0.77%)0.14 V (1.16%)0.23 V (1.93%)0.32 V (2.71%)
2 A0.093 V (0.77%)0.19 V (1.55%)0.28 V (2.32%)0.46 V (3.87%)0.65 V (5.41%)
3 A0.14 V (1.16%)0.28 V (2.32%)0.42 V (3.48%)0.70 V (5.80%)0.97 V (8.12%)
5 A0.23 V (1.93%)0.46 V (3.87%)0.70 V (5.80%)1.16 V (9.67%)1.62 V (13.53%)
7 A0.32 V (2.71%)0.65 V (5.41%)0.97 V (8.12%)1.62 V (13.53%)2.27 V (18.95%)

18 AWG Voltage Drop at 24V DC

Round-trip voltage drop for 18 AWG (0.75 mm²) copper wire at 20°C ambient. Cells highlighted in yellow exceed the 3% target; red cells exceed 5% and are not recommended.

Current1 m / 3 ft2 m / 7 ft3 m / 10 ft5 m / 16 ft7 m / 23 ft
1 A0.046 V (0.19%)0.093 V (0.39%)0.14 V (0.58%)0.23 V (0.97%)0.32 V (1.35%)
2 A0.093 V (0.39%)0.19 V (0.77%)0.28 V (1.16%)0.46 V (1.93%)0.65 V (2.71%)
3 A0.14 V (0.58%)0.28 V (1.16%)0.42 V (1.74%)0.70 V (2.90%)0.97 V (4.06%)
5 A0.23 V (0.97%)0.46 V (1.93%)0.70 V (2.90%)1.16 V (4.83%)1.62 V (6.77%)
7 A0.32 V (1.35%)0.65 V (2.71%)0.97 V (4.06%)1.62 V (6.77%)2.27 V (9.47%)

What is 18 AWG (0.75 mm²) used for?

Camper / RV applications

  • Indicator LEDs on the control panel (under 200 mA)
  • Reading lights with single LED chips (1–3 A)
  • Relay coil trigger wires (50–200 mA)
  • Switch panel feeds (combined under 5 A)
  • Temperature and tank-level sensor wires

Boat / marine applications

  • Indicator lights and panel illumination
  • NMEA 2000 power taps (drop cables)
  • Switch panel feeds for chartplotter and instruments
  • Bilge alarm and sensor wiring
  • Stereo speaker wires for low-power systems

Off-grid / solar applications

  • BMS communication and sense leads
  • Sensor wiring for temperature and voltage monitors
  • Remote display data cables
  • Trigger wires for high-current contactors
  • Low-side relay coil wiring

When to step up

  • Continuous current above 5 A — within 30% of ampacity
  • Cable runs longer than 5 m at 12V with currents above 3 A
  • Any load with inductive surge (relay coils, small motors)
  • When in doubt — stepping up to 1.5 mm² costs almost nothing on short runs

Fuse size for 18 AWG (0.75 mm²)

The fuse must protect the wire, not the load. For 18 AWG copper (0.75 mm²) the maximum fuse rating is 7 A. Below this ceiling, size the fuse at 125% of your continuous load current and round up to the next standard fuse size.

Continuous Load125% CalculationRecommended FuseFuse Type
2 A2.5 A5 ABlade (ATC)
5 A6.25 A7.5 ABlade (ATC)
8 A10 A7.5 ABlade (ATC)
10 A12.5 A7.5 ABlade (ATC)
Placement rule: place the fuse within 18 cm (7 inches) of the battery positive terminal. The unprotected wire between battery and fuse should be as short as possible — if it shorts to chassis, there is nothing to prevent a fire.

Related conversions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 0.75 mm² in AWG?

0.75 mm² is the metric pairing for 18 AWG in international cable standards. The precise AWG value of 0.75 mm² is between 18 AWG (0.823 mm²) and 19 AWG (0.653 mm²) — closer to 18 AWG. In practice, 0.75 mm² and 18 AWG are interchangeable in datasheets.

How many amps can 0.75 mm² handle?

0.75 mm² copper cable is rated for 7 A continuous at 20°C in chassis wiring — the same ampacity as 18 AWG. This is plenty for indicator LEDs, sensors, and relay coils, but tight for general lighting branches.

Is 0.75 mm² enough for a 12V dome light?

For single-LED dome lights (1–3 A), yes. For halogen dome lights (3–5 A) or multi-LED arrays, step up to 1 mm² or 1.5 mm². LED is now standard, so 0.75 mm² works for most modern camper interior lights — but the small step up to 1.5 mm² gives much more headroom for future upgrades.

What size fuse for 0.75 mm² wire?

Use a 5 A or 7.5 A blade fuse (ATC/ATO). For light branches under 3 A continuous, a 3 A or 5 A fuse gives better protection. Never exceed 7 A on 0.75 mm² cable.