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AWG to mm Converter — Wire Converter
AWG ↔ mm
Electrical
0
Inputs
Formula
01

What this converter does

This converter turns an AWG wire gauge into its diameter in millimetres and back. AWG is a geometric scale, so a lower gauge number means a thicker wire — and each step is a fixed ratio, not a fixed millimetre difference. Type a gauge and read the diameter instantly.

Use it to match American gauge sizes to metric cable specs. For 0, 00 and 000, enter −1, −2 and −3 as the gauge number.

02

The units it covers

American Wire Gauge is a geometric scale — each gauge step changes the diameter by a fixed ratio, so the relationship to millimetres is not a straight factor.

View all units & their values
UnitSymbolValueMainly used
Wire gaugeAWGnLower number = thicker wire
DiametermmdBare conductor diameter
03

The formula

Each AWG step multiplies the diameter by the 39th root of 92, so the conversion is exponential rather than a fixed ratio:

Conversion
d(mm) = 0.127 × 92^((36 − AWG) ÷ 39)

Where:

  • AWG = the gauge number (can be 0, 00, 000…)
  • d = bare conductor diameter in millimetres
  • 0.127 = diameter of 36 AWG in mm
04

Worked example

Find the diameter of 12 AWG wire in millimetres.

Step 1 · The formula
d = 0.127 × 92^((36 − 12) ÷ 39)
Step 2 · Evaluate
0.127 × 92^0.615 = 2.053 mm

So 12 AWG is about 2.05 mm in diameter — a common house-wiring size.

05

The units in this example

Wire gaugesymbol: AWG

The American Wire Gauge number. Lower numbers are thicker; every 6 gauges roughly doubles or halves the diameter.

Common AWG ↔ mm sizes
  • 12 AWG ≈ 2.05 mm
  • 14 AWG ≈ 1.63 mm
  • 20 AWG ≈ 0.81 mm
  • 0 AWG ≈ 8.25 mm
Diametersymbol: mm

The bare conductor diameter. Cross-sectional area (mm²) is often quoted too — it scales with the diameter squared.

Common AWG ↔ mm sizes
  • 2.05 mm ≈ 12 AWG
  • 1.63 mm ≈ 14 AWG
  • 1.0 mm ≈ 18 AWG
  • d = 0.127 × 92^((36−AWG)/39)
06

FAQ

QWhat is 12 AWG in mm?
About 2.05 mm in diameter, or roughly 3.3 mm² in cross-sectional area.
QWhy is lower AWG thicker?
AWG counts drawing steps: fewer draws means a larger, lower-numbered wire.
08

Sources

NIST SP 811 — units · IEC — conductor sizes

InfoCalculator Editorial Team Fact-checked
Updated Jul 2026 · 3 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team