Thermostat Wiring and Wire Colors
Last Updated on Wednesday, 24 February 2010 22:46 Written by Richard Thursday, 28 February 2008 22:25
Thermostat Wire and Thermostats Wiring For HVAC
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For many, wiring a thermostat can be a very big hurdle especially if they do not understand basic HVAC electrical control circuits, thermostat wire color designations, or thermostat terminal designations. No matter what type of thermostat you have, Honeywell, White Rogers, Robertshaw, Maple Chase, or whatever brand you have, High Performance HVAC Thermostat Wiring page will help you better understand this often confusing subject of thermostat wiring.
Thermostat is typically 18 gauge solid wire and is usually designated by different colors of many wires wrapped in an outer insulating jacket which hold the multi-color wires together. Reading the label on different wire reels one will notice 18-2, 18-3, 18-5, or even 18-10. The first numbers represents the gauge of the wire inside the outer jacket. The second number represents the number of wires or conductors inside the outer jacket. A reel labeled 18-2 will have two wires or conductors which are 18 gauge wire. A reel labeled 18-10 will have 10 wires or conductors which are 18 gauge.
Depending on the type of equipment you have will determine the number of wires needed to run from the thermostat to the equipment. The HVAC Technician who installed the equipment made the decision on the number of conductors needed for the installation of the equipment. It is common for the installer to pull more conductors than necessary therefore there may be some unused wires or conductors which can be used as spares in case the conductors which are in service are damaged in some way. In some cases, if you look behind the thermostat you will find these spare wires wrapped around the outer jacket or stuffed back into the hole or chase where the thermostat wire runs through the wall.
Thermostat Terminal Designations
It is important to note that before working on any type of wiring that the power for all the circuits be disabled. Typically, the air handler contains the control voltage for the thermostat (but not always). It is advisable that all HVAC equipment be turned off from the main power disconnect or breaker panel before proceeding with any wiring. Additionally, read the site disclaimer page for more information.
R - The R terminal on many thermostats typically is the 24 volt control power which feeds power to the other terminals (except the common terminal) when the thermostat is manually or automatically switched to an on position.
RC - The RC terminal is not on all thermostats. It is usually on thermostats which allow for separate equipment control transformers where the two different control circuits need to be isolated. The RC terminal is usually fed from the cooling or air conditioning equipment and is used to energize all the components necessary for cooling or air conditioning.
RH - Just as the RC terminal, the RH terminal is not on all thermostats. This will usually accompany the RC terminal where the thermostat will isolated two different control transformers. The RH terminal will feed all the heating components necessary to run the heat according to thermostat manual and automatic settings.
Typically, the 24 volts control power is fed directly from a control transformer located in the HVAC equipment. For best results with modern state of the art solid-state controls and circuitry always use National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) rated transformers.
The commonly used wire colors for the R, RC, and RH terminal is red. It is possible, when the circuits are isolated, to have more than one red wire in the thermostat. It is also possible that only one control transformer is being used to control the equipment and the RC and RH terminals have a jumper wire running between so that they may share the control power. If you are unsure about this always consult an HVAC professional as miswiring can damage components and cost more to repair than the cost of paying an HVAC professional technician to install a thermostat correctly.
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R or RH thermostat terminal - For heating power (24 Volts a.c.) if an RC terminal is present. For heating and cooling if no other R terminals. |
R or RH thermostat terminal - For heating power (24 Volts a.c.) if an RC terminal is present. For heating and cooling if no other R terminals. |
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RC thermostat terminal - for cooling power (24 volts a.c.) |
RC thermostat terminal - for cooling power (24 volts a.c.) |
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W thermostat terminal - for the first stage of heating. Most systems only have one stage of heating so this will be the most commonly used terminal. |
W thermostat terminal - for the first stage of heating. Heat pumps systems can have many different stages for back-up heat (unless you have a geothermal system) |
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W2 thermostat terminal - this will be for the second stage of heating. Some gas furnaces have high fire and low fire and rely on this terminal for high fire staging. It not uncommon for electric furnaces to have two stages for heating.* |
W2 thermostat terminal - this will be for the second stage of heating. Some gas furnaces have high fire and low fire and rely on this terminal for high fire staging. It not uncommon for electric furnaces to have two stages for heating.* |
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Y thermostat terminal - this thermostat terminal will engage the cooling. Usually this is wired directly to the compressor contactor located in the condensing unit. The wiring for this usually passes through the air handling unit on a split system. |
Y thermostat terminal - this thermostat terminal will engage the cooling. Usually this is wired directly to the compressor contactor located in the condensing unit. The wiring for this usually passes through the air handling unit on a split system. |
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Y2 thermostat terminal - this thermostat terminal is for the second stage cooling. Very few residential units have two stages of cooling. There are exceptions. Older two-stage systems rely on a secondary control other than the thermostat to engage the second stage. Consult manufacturer's paperwork or a professional HVAC technician if you have a two-stage compressor or two compressors. |
Y2 thermostat terminal - this thermostat terminal is for the second stage cooling. Very few residential units have two stages of cooling. There are exceptions. Older two-stage systems rely on a secondary control other than the thermostat to engage the second stage. Consult manufacturer's paperwork or a professional HVAC technician if you have a two-stage compressor or two compressors. |
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G thermostat terminal - this thermostat terminal is for indoor blower fan control. |
G thermostat terminal - this thermostat terminal is for indoor blower fan control. |
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C thermostat terminal - this is the common side of the 24 volts step down transformer. If the thermostat pulls power from the transformer (usually located in the air handler) for power then this thermostat terminal is necessary for the thermostat to function properly. Older mercury type thermostats usually have indicator lights and this terminal is necessary so that these indicator lights will function. |
C thermostat terminal - this is the common side of the 24 volts step down transformer. If the thermostat pulls power from the transformer (usually located in the air handler) for power then this thermostat terminal is necessary for the thermostat to function properly. Older mercury type thermostats usually have indicator lights and this terminal is necessary so that these indicator lights will function. |
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S1 and S2 thermostat terminals - these terminals are in newer thermostats and are a bell and whistle for a high tech digital thermostat. This terminal works in conjunction with the S2 thermostat terminal (noted below) for reading outside air temperatures for display purposes only in (conventional) non-heat pump thermostats. |
S1 and S2 thermostat terminals - these terminals are in newer thermostats and are a bell and whistle for a high tech digital thermostat. This terminal works in conjunction with the S2 thermostat terminal (noted below) for reading outside air temperatures for display purposes only in (conventional) non-heat pump thermostats. For heat pump thermostats this terminal can be an energy saver by cutting out the outdoor unit off when the outside air temperature drops below a temperature where the outside unit becomes inefficient. This temperature varies depending on geographical location. |
O or B Thermostat Terminal - this thermostat terminal controls the reversing valve in the heat pump condensing unit. This switches over the unit from heating to cooling. The O terminal in the thermostat will control the reversing valve to activate in cooling mode. The O terminal is default to heating or fail-safe to heat. Using the B terminal the reversing valve will activate in the heating mode. The default is cooling in this type of unit. Typically, the B terminal is only used in Rheem and Ruud Heat Pump Systems where Rheem and Ruud heat pumps require solenoid activation in the heating mode and this is what the B terminal does for a Rheem or Ruud heat pump. It is unnecessary to hook anything up to the O terminal if you have a Rheem or Ruud heat pump and unnecessary to anything up to the B terminal if you have any other type of heat pump*. Always follow the manufactuers instructions for thermostat installations.
If you are unsure of the terminals when wiring a thermostat please consult your local HVAC contractor.


written by Cory, October 22, 2008
You do not have the common function terminals like:
G is for the Fan (Green)
W is for Heating (White)
Y is for Cooling (Yellow)
And then the terminals on more specialized HVAC systems (wire colours vary)
W2 for second stage heating
Y2 for second compressor (cooling) or second stage cooling
O and B for Heat pump change over (O is energize to cool and B is energize to heat)
E for emergency heating
C, B, X are usually the common or "neutral" side of the 24VAC transformer.
written by Robert10, November 18, 2008
Thank you
Robert Caron
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written by Webmaster, November 18, 2008
written by Tom DeWitt, November 27, 2008
written by Tara, January 18, 2009
written by sohan (boiler installer), May 13, 2009
http://www.boilerinstallationslondon.co.uk
written by trotter, May 31, 2009
from themo to board. it read C Y GC GH R W which wire do I hook to I have red white blue green yellow that run from themo
written by GreenEE, July 10, 2009
O is powered from RC when cooling is needed (looks like mirrors Y)
B is powered from RC when heating is needed
Is this correct?
Thanks
written by Jessica, July 15, 2009
written by Danno, August 07, 2009
Y & C or Y & G?
written by James, September 02, 2009
Thanks,
James
written by Shawn, January 10, 2010
written by famousacandheat, May 24, 2010
Thank you for sahring...










this was a gift and i have no paper instruction