One of the biggest challenges when setting up a surround sound system is getting speaker wire from your AV receiver to speakers placed around the room, especially surround and rear speakers that sit on the opposite side of the room from your equipment. Cutting into walls for in-wall wire runs delivers the cleanest result, but it is not always an option. Renters cannot modify walls, homeowners may not want the hassle and expense of drywall work, and some wall constructions (concrete, brick) make in-wall routing impractical.
The good news is that you have several excellent options for running speaker wire that keep your installation clean and your walls intact. From adhesive cable raceways to virtually invisible flat wire, this guide covers every method for getting audio signal to your speakers without a single hole in the drywall. We also cover wire gauge selection, connector types, and when wireless speakers make more sense than wire. If you are still choosing your speakers, see our best home theater speaker systems guide.
This guide references several calculators. Open them in new tabs to follow along:
Before buying a single foot of wire, map out the path each cable will take from your AV receiver to each speaker. Good planning minimizes the total wire needed, reduces visible cable runs, and prevents the frustrating discovery that a route does not work after you have already started installing. Need a receiver? See our best AV receivers guide for top picks.
Draw a simple floor plan of your room showing the AV receiver location and each speaker position. Mark doorways, windows, and any obstacles like built-in shelving or fireplaces. For each speaker, trace the wire path along walls and baseboards from the receiver. The goal is to follow room edges and architectural features so the wire blends in rather than cutting across open floor or wall space.
Front speakers near the AV receiver usually need short, easy runs. The real challenge is surround speakers, which typically sit behind or beside the listening position, far from the receiver. For these runs, identify whether you can route wire along the same wall as the receiver and then along the side walls, or whether you need to cross a doorway or open span. Each obstacle has a specific solution covered in the steps below.
Use a tape measure to trace the exact path along walls, up doorframes, and around corners. Add 3-5 feet of slack to each measurement for connections and adjustments. Our Cable Length Calculator can help you account for elevation changes and routing detours. Write down each speaker run length, as this determines the wire gauge you need.
Speaker wire gauge (measured in AWG, American Wire Gauge) determines how much resistance the wire adds to the circuit. More resistance means more signal loss, which can reduce volume and affect sound quality at the speaker. Thicker wire (lower AWG number) has less resistance per foot.
| Wire Gauge | Max Run (8 ohm) | Max Run (4 ohm) | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18 AWG | 32 feet | 16 feet | Short runs, surround speakers |
| 16 AWG | 48 feet | 24 feet | Most home theater runs |
| 14 AWG | 80 feet | 40 feet | Long runs, powered subwoofers |
| 12 AWG | 120 feet | 60 feet | Very long runs, low-impedance speakers |
For the typical home theater with speaker runs under 50 feet, 16 AWG wire is the sweet spot. It is affordable, flexible enough to route easily, and provides negligible resistance at normal home theater distances. If any of your runs exceed 50 feet (common for rear surround speakers in large rooms), step up to 14 AWG for those specific runs. There is no benefit to using wire thicker than needed; it just makes routing more difficult and costs more.
The maximum run distances in the table above are based on keeping total wire resistance below 5% of the speaker impedance, which is the threshold where signal loss becomes audible. For a more precise calculation based on your specific speaker impedance and run lengths, use our Cable Length Calculator.
Pure copper wire (OFC, oxygen-free copper) is the standard and preferred choice. It has the lowest resistance per foot and excellent corrosion resistance. Copper-clad aluminum (CCA) wire is cheaper but has about 60% more resistance than pure copper of the same gauge. If you choose CCA, go up one gauge size (e.g., use 14 AWG CCA instead of 16 AWG copper) to compensate for the higher resistance. For critical listening applications, always use pure copper.
Cable raceways are the most versatile and professional-looking solution for surface-mounted speaker wire. They are plastic channels that mount to the wall or baseboard surface and snap closed over the wire, creating a clean, finished appearance.
Adhesive-backed raceways stick to the wall surface with double-sided tape. They install in minutes without any tools beyond a hacksaw or utility knife for cutting to length. The adhesive holds well on smooth, painted surfaces. This is the best option for renters since they remove cleanly without damaging paint (use a hair dryer to soften the adhesive before removal).
Screw-mount raceways attach with small screws for a more permanent installation. They hold better on textured walls where adhesive may not stick reliably. The screw holes are small enough to patch with a dab of spackle if you ever remove them.
Corner raceways sit in the corner where the wall meets the floor or ceiling. Their triangular profile fits naturally into the corner, making them nearly invisible. These are ideal for running wire along the top of a wall near the ceiling or along the baseboard.
Many baseboards have a small gap between the bottom of the baseboard and the floor. This gap, typically 1/8 to 1/4 inch, is enough to tuck thin speaker wire underneath without removing the baseboard.
Use a plastic putty knife to gently push 18 AWG or flat speaker wire into the gap between the baseboard and floor. Start at one end of the wall and work your way along, pushing the wire down every few inches. The wire should be completely hidden when viewed from normal standing height. This method works best on hardwood or tile floors where there is a clear gap. On carpeted floors, the carpet edge usually tucks under the baseboard, leaving less room.
For a cleaner result with thicker wire, carefully remove the baseboard using a thin pry bar and putty knife (slide the putty knife behind the baseboard first to protect the wall from pry marks). Run the speaker wire along the wall where the baseboard was, securing it with small cable staples or adhesive clips. Reattach the baseboard over the wire. This method completely hides the wire and accommodates any gauge. Mark your baseboard pieces so you can reattach them in the correct positions.
Flat speaker wire is a specialized product designed to be virtually invisible on wall surfaces. It consists of two flat copper conductors (typically 16 or 18 AWG equivalent) bonded to an adhesive-backed tape that sticks directly to the wall or floor surface.
Flat wire is only about 1-2mm thick, making it essentially invisible once applied to a wall and painted over. Peel off the adhesive backing, press the wire onto the wall surface along your planned route, and paint over it with matching wall paint. Once dry, the wire is completely hidden. Flat wire transitions from regular round wire at each end using included adapter connectors, so you use round wire for the connections to the receiver and speaker, with flat wire only for the visible span along the wall.
Flat wire is more expensive per foot than standard speaker wire (roughly $1-2 per foot vs $0.10-0.30 for round wire). It is limited to 16 or 18 AWG equivalent, which restricts run length. And once painted over, relocating the wire means repainting. Use flat wire only for the visible sections where other concealment methods are not practical, and use standard round wire for hidden sections behind furniture or inside raceways.
When wired routes are simply not feasible, wireless speaker technology has matured to the point where it delivers excellent audio quality with minimal compromise. Here are your wireless options for getting audio to hard-to-reach speaker locations.
These kits consist of a transmitter that connects to your AV receiver's surround speaker outputs and a receiver module placed at the surround speaker location. The transmitter sends the audio signal wirelessly, and the receiver module connects to your passive speakers via standard speaker wire. This eliminates the long wire run across the room while still using your existing speakers. Most kits support two channels (left and right surround) and use 5.8GHz wireless to avoid WiFi interference. Latency is typically under 20ms, which is imperceptible for movie watching.
Some surround sound systems use wireless powered speakers that receive audio via WiFi, Bluetooth, or a proprietary wireless connection from the AV receiver or soundbar. Brands like Sonos, Samsung, and LG offer wireless rear speaker add-ons for their soundbar systems. The speakers still need power (either from an outlet or built-in battery), but you eliminate the speaker wire entirely. Sound quality from dedicated wireless surround speakers is very good, though generally not quite equal to a quality wired passive speaker of the same price.
WiSA (Wireless Speaker and Audio) is an industry standard for wireless multichannel audio. WiSA-certified transmitters and speakers deliver uncompressed 24-bit audio with under 5ms latency across up to 8 channels. This is the highest-quality wireless speaker technology currently available and is virtually indistinguishable from wired connections in blind listening tests. The downside is limited product selection and higher cost compared to standard wired setups.
Use this quick reference to select the right wire gauge for each speaker in your system. The key factors are the cable run length and the speaker impedance (listed in the speaker specifications, typically 4, 6, or 8 ohms).
| Speaker | Typical Run | Recommended Gauge |
|---|---|---|
| Front Left/Right | 5-15 feet | 16 AWG |
| Center Channel | 5-10 feet | 16 AWG |
| Side Surrounds | 15-40 feet | 16 AWG |
| Rear Surrounds | 25-60 feet | 14-16 AWG |
| Atmos Height | 20-50 feet | 16 AWG |
| Subwoofer (passive) | 10-30 feet | 14 AWG |
How you terminate the ends of your speaker wire affects both convenience and long-term reliability. Here are the three main options.
Stripping the wire jacket and inserting bare copper strands into binding post terminals works fine and costs nothing. The downsides are that bare copper oxidizes over time (reducing conductivity), stray strands can touch each other and cause a short circuit, and connecting/disconnecting requires loosening and retightening the binding post each time. For a quick temporary setup, bare wire is acceptable. For a permanent installation, consider one of the connector options below.
Banana plugs crimp or screw onto the end of the speaker wire and plug directly into the binding post hole on receivers and speakers. They provide a solid, oxidation-resistant connection that is easy to plug and unplug. Quality banana plugs cost $1-3 per pair and take just a few minutes to install with a wire stripper and screwdriver. For any installation you plan to keep long-term, banana plugs are the best investment in cable management.
Spade (fork) connectors slide under the binding post nut and are tightened down. They provide slightly more surface contact than banana plugs and are preferred by some audiophiles. However, they require more effort to connect and disconnect. Spade connectors work best when you do not expect to ever remove the cable.