Ohm's Law Calculator: Calculate Voltage, Current, or Resistance
Current, power, and resistance from voltage and any one other value
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Solved variable from V, I, R
At 12V across 100Ω, the current is 0,12 A and the resistor dissipates 1,44 watts.
Ohm's law relates voltage, current, and resistance in a circuit: current equals voltage divided by resistance. Together with the power law, which multiplies voltage and current, it gives you the electrical behavior of any resistor or resistive component in a DC circuit.
This Ohm's Law Calculator is an indispensable tool for anyone working with direct current (DC) electrical circuits, from students and hobbyists to professional engineers. It allows you to quickly and accurately determine voltage, current, resistance, and power by inputting any two known values. Leveraging the fundamental principles of Ohm's Law (V=IR) and the power law (P=VI), this calculator simplifies complex electrical calculations. It's essential for tasks such as designing new electronic circuits, selecting appropriate components like resistors, verifying power requirements, and efficiently troubleshooting circuit faults. Understanding these relationships is crucial for ensuring the safe, reliable, and optimal operation of any DC electrical system.
What is an ohm's law?
Use this Ohm's law calculator to solve for any of the three fundamental quantities in V = IR — voltage, current, or resistance — when the other two are known. Enter any two values, and our tool will compute the third, along with the dissipated power (P = VI). This calculator is an indispensable resource for students tackling electronics homework, engineers designing new circuits, and hobbyists verifying component sizing and power requirements. Ohm's Law is the foundational principle governing resistive circuits, as taught in every introductory physics and electrical engineering textbook. Understanding these relationships is crucial for preventing component damage, optimizing circuit efficiency, and ensuring safe operation in any DC electrical system.
The formula
- V — voltage in volts
- I — current in amperes
- R — resistance in ohms
- P — power in watts
Source: Ohm's Law (V=IR) and Joule's Law (P=VI).
Worked examples
1A 12 V supply with a 100 Ω resistor
12 V across 100 Ω draws 0.12 A (120 mA). The resistor dissipates 1.44 watts — well above a quarter-watt resistor's rating, so this design needs at least a 2 W part to avoid overheating. Typical mistake in first circuits.
2An LED current-limit calculation
A red LED with 3.3 V supply minus its 3.3 − 2.0 = 1.3 V forward drop (entered here as 2.7 across the resistor, keeping total at 3.3 V) through a 330 Ω limiter draws about 8 mA — safely inside the 20 mA LED tolerance. The resistor burns about 22 mW, fine for any quarter-watt part.
3Calculating resistance for a specific current
To draw exactly 20 mA (0.02 A) from a 5 V supply, the total circuit resistance must be 250 Ω (R = V/I = 5V / 0.02A). This is a common calculation when selecting a current-limiting resistor for an LED or a sensor.
How to use this calculator
- Voltage (default: 12)
- Resistance (default: 100)
- Read the result. Use the worked examples below to sanity-check against a known scenario.
Frequently asked questions
When does Ohm's law not apply?
How do I size a resistor's power rating?
What if I only know two of the three quantities?
What is the difference between voltage and current?
What are the practical applications of Ohm's Law?
How does temperature affect a resistor's value?
Can Ohm's Law be used for AC circuits?
What is the significance of power dissipation in a resistor?
Ohm's Law glossary
How we built this calculator
Methodology
Ohm's law describes the linear relationship between voltage, current, and resistance in a resistive element. Current is directly proportional to voltage and inversely proportional to resistance. The law holds for ohmic conductors — metals, resistors, most wires — across a wide range of conditions. It fails for non-linear components (diodes, transistors, incandescent bulbs at operating temperature), where the instantaneous I-V curve is the correct model.
This calculator was written by Numora physics team and reviewed by Electrical Engineer (PE) before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.
Sources & references
Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.
- Serway, Raymond A., and John W. Jewett. Physics for Scientists and Engineers. Cengage Learning.INT
- Halliday, David, Robert Resnick, and Jearl Walker. Fundamentals of Physics. Wiley.INT
- The ARRL Handbook for Radio Communications. American Radio Relay League.USA
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). SI Units.USA
- Numora Editorial Policy. numora.net/editorial-policy