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Ohm's Law Calculator - Voltage, Current, Resistance & Power | ToolsInstant
⚡ Electrical Tool

Ohm's Law Calculator - Voltage, Current, Resistance & Power

Calculate voltage, current, resistance, and power using Ohm's Law (V=IR) and Power equations (P=VI). Enter any 2 known values to find the rest.

📘 How It Works ⚡ The Quantities 🔧 Use Cases ❓ FAQ

⚡ Ohm's Law Calculator

Solve V=IR & P=VI with any 2 known values

🎛️ I Know These 2 Values
🔢 Enter Values
V Voltage
I Current
💡 Quick Examples
⚡ DIGITAL READING
V VoltageINPUT
12.000 V
I CurrentINPUT
2.000 A
R ResistanceCALC
6.000 Ω
P PowerCALC
24.000 W
📐 Formulas Used
Equations applied for the current calculation:
🧠 Quick Interpretation
A 12V source pushing 2A through a 6Ω load dissipates 24W of power. Typical for a low-power DC circuit like a small motor or LED strip.
⚠️ Safety Note: These calculations assume DC (direct current) and purely resistive loads. AC circuits with reactance (inductors, capacitors, motors) require additional analysis with impedance and power factor. Always observe electrical safety — never work on live circuits without proper training, and respect that voltage, current, and especially their product (power) can be dangerous or lethal.

📘 How Ohm's Law Works

Discovered by Georg Ohm in 1827, Ohm's Law is one of the foundational principles of electrical engineering. It describes how voltage, current, and resistance relate — and the power equation extends it to energy dissipation.

1
V = I × R
The core relationship. Voltage (in Volts) equals current (Amperes) times resistance (Ohms). Rearranged: I = V/R (current = voltage / resistance) or R = V/I (resistance = voltage / current). Three variables, one equation, infinite uses.
2
P = V × I
The power equation. Power (in Watts) equals voltage times current. Combined with Ohm's Law gives variants: P = I²R (power = current squared times resistance) and P = V²/R (power = voltage squared divided by resistance). Critical for thermal calculations.
3
Any 2 → All 4
Given any 2 of the 4 quantities (V, I, R, P), you can always calculate the other 2. This calculator handles all 6 combinations. For example: know voltage and power? Get current (I = P/V) then resistance (R = V/I or V²/P).

⚡ The Four Electrical Quantities

Understanding what V, I, R, and P represent — and their water-pipe analogy — makes circuit analysis click intuitively.

🔋
Voltage (V) — Electrical Pressure
Measured in Volts (V). Think of voltage as electrical "pressure" — like water pressure in a pipe. A 12V battery provides 12 volts of pressure. Higher voltage pushes more current through a given resistance. Standard scales: μV (microvolts), mV (millivolts), V (volts), kV (kilovolts).
💧
Current (I) — Flow Rate
Measured in Amperes/Amps (A). Current is the flow of electrons — like gallons-per-minute in a pipe. The "I" symbol comes from French "intensité." Standard scales: μA (microamps, sensors), mA (milliamps, LEDs), A (amps, household), kA (kiloamps, industrial).
🚧
Resistance (R) — Opposition
Measured in Ohms (Ω). Resistance opposes current flow — like a narrow section of pipe restricting water. Higher resistance reduces current for a given voltage. Standard scales: Ω (ohms, wires), kΩ (kilohms, signal resistors), MΩ (megohms, insulation). Conductors have low R; insulators have very high R.
💡
Power (P) — Energy Rate
Measured in Watts (W). Power is the rate of energy use — how fast energy is converted to heat, light, motion, etc. A 60W bulb uses 60 joules per second. Standard scales: mW (milliwatts, electronics), W (watts, appliances), kW (kilowatts, large appliances), MW (megawatts, power plants).
🚿
The Water Analogy
Voltage = water pressure. Current = water flow rate. Resistance = pipe narrowness. Power = energy per second the water delivers. Increase pressure (V) → more flow (I). Add a constriction (R) → less flow for the same pressure. This analogy explains 95% of basic circuit behavior intuitively.
🔥
Why Power Matters
Power equals heat in resistive circuits. A resistor with 1W dissipation gets warm; 10W gets hot; 100W damages most components. Always check wattage when sizing resistors — a 1/4W resistor will burn out at 1W. Power also drives battery sizing, energy costs, and component selection for any electrical project.

🔧 Real-World Applications

Ohm's Law shows up everywhere — from picking the right resistor for an LED to sizing wires in a house, estimating battery life, or troubleshooting a circuit.

💡
LED Current Limiting
LEDs need a resistor to limit current. For a 9V battery with a 3V/20mA LED: voltage to drop across resistor = 9-3 = 6V. R = V/I = 6/0.020 = 300 Ω. Use the next standard value (330Ω) for safety. Power dissipation in resistor: P = V×I = 6 × 0.020 = 120mW (a 1/4W resistor is fine).
🔋
Battery Life Estimation
A 3000mAh battery powering a device drawing 100mA lasts 3000/100 = 30 hours. But voltage and current relate: a 12V/3Ah battery with a 60W load consumes 60/12 = 5A, lasting 3/5 = 0.6 hours. Always factor in real-world inefficiencies (typically 70-80% of theoretical).
🔌
Wire Sizing & Voltage Drop
Wires have small but real resistance. Over long runs (50+ ft), this causes voltage drop. For a 12V system with 10A current through 100ft of 14 AWG wire (0.25Ω): voltage drop = I×R = 10×0.25 = 2.5V — that's 21% loss. Use thicker wire (lower R) for long runs and high current.
🛡️
Fuse & Breaker Selection
A 1500W heater at 120V draws I = P/V = 1500/120 = 12.5A. Use a 15A fuse or breaker (next standard size up). For motor loads, allow 25% extra for inrush. Never use a fuse rated higher than the wire can safely handle — that's how fires start.
⚙️
Motor & Heater Sizing
A 240V electric kettle marked "1500W" draws 1500/240 = 6.25A. Its effective resistance: R = V²/P = 240²/1500 = 38.4Ω. Knowing power, voltage, and current lets you verify the device matches your circuit capacity before plugging in.
🔧
Troubleshooting
Measure with a multimeter, then verify with Ohm's Law. If a 5V circuit pulls 100mA instead of expected 50mA, resistance is half what it should be — likely a short or wrong component. If power output is way below expected, voltage may be sagging under load — check power supply or battery condition.

🔗 Series vs Parallel Circuits

Ohm's Law applies to individual components. For multiple resistors, you combine them differently depending on the configuration.

Series Circuits
R Adds Up
  • Components connected end-to-end
  • R_total = R₁ + R₂ + R₃ + ...
  • Same current flows through all
  • Voltage divides among components
  • Example: Old Christmas lights — one bulb fails, all go dark
Parallel Circuits
R Decreases
  • Components connected side-by-side
  • 1/R_total = 1/R₁ + 1/R₂ + 1/R₃ + ...
  • Same voltage across all
  • Current divides among components
  • Example: Home wiring — outlets work independently
Mixed Networks
Hybrid
  • Combine series and parallel sections
  • Reduce one section at a time
  • Most real circuits are mixed
  • Use Kirchhoff's laws for complex networks
  • Mesh and node analysis for advanced cases

🔗 Related Calculators

🎨
Resistor Color Code
Decode 4-band, 5-band, and 6-band resistor color codes.
📐
Voltage Divider Calculator
Compute output voltage for two-resistor dividers.
⚡
Parallel Resistance Calculator
Calculate total resistance for parallel resistors.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is Ohm's Law?
Ohm's Law states that the current through a conductor between two points is directly proportional to the voltage across the two points, with resistance as the proportionality constant: V = I × R. Formulated by Georg Ohm in 1827, it's foundational to all electrical engineering. The law applies to "ohmic" materials (most metals at constant temperature) but breaks down for semiconductors, plasmas, and other non-linear devices.
Does Ohm's Law work for AC circuits?
It works for resistive AC loads (heaters, incandescent bulbs) — use RMS voltage and current. For reactive components (capacitors, inductors, motors), you must use impedance (Z) instead of resistance: V = I × Z, where Z includes resistance and reactance. Power in AC also requires considering power factor: P = V × I × cos(φ). For purely resistive AC loads, Ohm's Law applies directly with RMS values.
Why is current "I" instead of "C"?
"I" stands for "intensité" — French for intensity — used by André-Marie Ampère (the namesake of the unit) in early 19th-century writings. "C" was reserved for capacitance and the speed of light. The convention stuck globally. It can be confusing for newcomers but is the universal symbol in physics and engineering.
What's the difference between V=IR and V×I=P?
V=IR is Ohm's Law — it relates voltage, current, and resistance in a circuit. V×I=P is the Power Law — it tells you how much energy is being used or dissipated. They're different relationships but both involve the same variables (V and I), which is why they're often used together. Combined, they let you derive variants like P=I²R (power from current and resistance) or P=V²/R (power from voltage and resistance).
How do I calculate resistor power rating?
Calculate the actual power: P = I² × R or P = V²/R, depending on what you know. Then select a resistor rated at least 2× this value for safety margin. Common ratings: 1/8W (small signal), 1/4W (most common), 1/2W, 1W, 5W, 10W (high power). For example, a 470Ω resistor with 9V across it dissipates 9²/470 = 0.172W — a 1/4W resistor works fine (with 30% headroom).
Can voltage and current ever be negative?
Yes — in AC circuits voltage and current alternate between positive and negative many times per second (50-60 Hz mains). In DC circuits, the sign indicates direction relative to a reference. Power is the product, so when V and I have the same sign, power is positive (consumed by the load). When they have opposite signs (like in batteries during charging or generators), power flows the opposite way.
What's "voltage drop" and why does it matter?
Voltage drop is the reduction in voltage along a wire due to its resistance. For a wire with resistance R carrying current I, drop = I × R. For most household wiring it's small (1-3%), but for long DC runs (solar panels, RVs, marine) it becomes significant. Too much drop causes underperformance, voltage starvation of devices, and wire heating. Use thicker wire (lower resistance per foot) or higher voltage to reduce drop.
How accurate is this calculator?
Mathematically perfect — these are exact algebraic relationships. In real circuits, accuracy depends on: component tolerances (resistors typically ±5% or ±1%), temperature (resistance changes with heat), wire resistance (often ignored in calculations), and measurement precision. For practical work, account for these by sizing components conservatively (2× safety margin on power, 25% on current).
What's the difference between Ohms, Watts, Volts, and Amps?
They measure different things: Volts measure electrical pressure (voltage). Amps measure electron flow rate (current). Ohms measure opposition to flow (resistance). Watts measure energy per second (power). Think of plumbing: pressure ≠ flow ≠ pipe size ≠ horsepower of the pump. They're related (Ohm's Law and Power Law connect them) but each represents a distinct physical quantity.
What's the safe voltage to work with?
Up to 50V DC or 30V AC is generally considered safe to touch under normal dry conditions. Above this, sufficient current can flow through your body to be dangerous. Mains voltage (120V/240V) can be lethal — about 100mA across the heart is fatal, and just 10-20mA can cause involuntary muscle contraction. Always assume any circuit is live until proven dead with a meter, and use proper PPE.
Why do I need to know about both voltage and current?
Voltage alone doesn't tell you danger or power — current does. Static electricity can hit you with 10,000+ volts but the current is microscopic, so it just stings. Conversely, a 12V car battery has low voltage but can deliver 600A in a short circuit, which can weld metal. To understand any electrical situation, you need both numbers (and their product, power).
Is Ohm's Law really always true?
For "ohmic" devices (most resistors, wires, etc., at constant temperature), yes. But many real devices are non-linear: LEDs have a sharp threshold voltage; diodes only conduct one direction; transistors are voltage-controlled current sources; light bulbs have resistance that increases dramatically when hot. For these, you need device-specific models (I-V curves, datasheets). Ohm's Law remains the foundation but isn't the whole story.
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