Ohms Law Calculator – Voltage, Current, Resistance & Power Calculator with Unit Conversion

Free Ohms Law calculator to calculate voltage, current, resistance, and power. Input any 2 values to find all others. Supports multiple unit conversions and includes power wheel formulas. Essential tool for electricians and engineers.

Ohms Law Calculator

Calculate Voltage, Current, Resistance & Power - Complete Electrical Circuit Calculator

⚡ Pro Tips for Ohms Law Calculations: Fundamental formula: V = I × R. Power equation: P = V × I. All formulas equivalent: P = I² × R = V²/R. Minimum 2 values required (rest calculated). Always use base units (V, A, Ω, W). Power wheel mnemonic aids memory. Check results using alternate formulas. Unit conversions essential for accuracy.

Ohms Law Calculator - Enter Any 2 Values

Instructions:
V = I × R (Voltage = Current × Resistance)
P = V × I (Power = Voltage × Current)
Enter any 2 known values, others calculated
Calculation Information:
  • Enter minimum 2 values to calculate others
  • All conversions automatic (different units supported)
  • Leave empty fields blank for calculator to fill
  • Results displayed with appropriate precision
  • Formula verification using multiple methods
✅ Calculation Results:

Power Wheel - All Ohms Law Formulas

The Power Wheel Diagram
P (Power)
Watts [W]
V
Voltage
(Volts)
I
Current
(Amperes)
R (Resistance)
Ohms [Ω]
All Equivalent Formulas:
To Find Formula 1 Formula 2 Formula 3
Voltage (V) V = I × R V = P / I V = √(P × R)
Current (I) I = V / R I = P / V I = √(P / R)
Resistance (R) R = V / I R = P / I² R = V² / P
Power (P) P = V × I P = I² × R P = V² / R
How to Use Power Wheel:
The power wheel is mnemonic device showing relationships between V, I, R, P. Cover desired quantity, remaining three show how to calculate it. Example: cover R, see V/I. Three power formulas cover all combinations.

Ohms Law Reference & Examples

Common Electrical Values & Conversions:
Quantity Unit Symbol Common Values Conversion
Voltage Volt V 120V, 240V, 480V (AC) 1 kV = 1000 V
Current Ampere A 1A, 10A, 100A 1 mA = 0.001 A
Resistance Ohm Ω 100Ω, 1kΩ, 1MΩ 1 kΩ = 1000 Ω
Power Watt W 100W, 1kW, 1MW 1 kW = 1000 W
Energy Joule J 1 J = 1 W × 1 s 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J
Practical Calculation Examples:
Scenario Known Values Formula Used Calculation Result
Household Circuit 120V, 15A P = V × I 120 × 15 1800W
Heating Element 240V, 5000W I = P / V 5000 / 240 20.83A
Motor Load 480V, 10A R = V / I 480 / 10 48Ω
Resistor Heat 24V, 0.5A P = I² × R 0.5² × 96 24W
Power Dissipation 5V, 1000Ω P = V² / R 5² / 1000 0.025W
Unit Conversion Reference:
Voltage: kV (×1000), V (base), mV (÷1000)
Current: A (base), mA (÷1000), µA (÷1,000,000)
Resistance: MΩ (×1,000,000), kΩ (×1000), Ω (base), mΩ (÷1000)
Power: MW (×1,000,000), kW (×1000), W (base), mW (÷1000)
⚡ Understanding Ohms Law & Electrical Fundamentals
What is Ohms Law?:

Fundamental principle in electrical engineering. States relationship: \(V = I \times R\) (Voltage equals Current times Resistance). Named after Georg Simon Ohm. Foundation for circuit analysis, power calculations, electrical design. Every electrical circuit obeys this law.

Key Electrical Quantities:
  • Voltage (V): Electrical potential difference, measured in volts. Pushes current through circuit. Like water pressure in a pipe.
  • Current (I): Flow of electric charge, measured in amperes (amps). Represents charge moving per unit time. Like water flow rate.
  • Resistance (R): Opposition to current flow, measured in ohms (Ω). All materials have resistance. Like pipe narrowness.
  • Power (P): Rate of energy consumption/transfer, measured in watts (W). P = V × I. Determines heat generation, energy usage.
Related Formulas and Relationships:
  • Voltage: V = I × R = P / I = √(P × R)
  • Current: I = V / R = P / V = √(P / R)
  • Resistance: R = V / I = V² / P = P / I²
  • Power: P = V × I = I² × R = V² / R
Practical Applications:
  • Circuit Design: Determine wire size, component ratings for safe operation
  • Safety: Calculate maximum safe current, voltage for equipment
  • Energy Efficiency: Determine power consumption, operating costs
  • Troubleshooting: Identify circuit faults, component failures
  • Equipment Selection: Choose proper breakers, fuses, wire gauges
Important Safety Notes:
  • Never exceed component power ratings (fire/explosion hazard)
  • Heat dissipation critical at high power (cooling required)
  • Always include safety margin (2× calculated values)
  • AC circuits more complex (power factor, impedance)
  • Professional installation recommended for high-voltage systems
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How do you find resistance if you know voltage and current? +
Using Ohms Law rearranged: R = V / I. Example: 110V circuit with 0.2A current = 110 / 0.2 = 550Ω. Resistance inversely proportional to current. Higher current (same voltage) = lower resistance.
What happens to power when you double the voltage? +
Power increases quadratically: P = V² / R. Doubling voltage = quadruples power (2² = 4). Example: 5V/1000Ω = 0.025W. At 10V/1000Ω = 0.1W (4× more). Critical for component selection.
Why does resistance increase with wire length? +
Formula: R = ρL/A (resistivity × length / area). Longer path = more opposition to current. Doubling length doubles resistance. Must use thicker wire for long runs to minimize voltage drop.
How is power factor different from real power? +
AC circuits only. Apparent power = V × I. Real power = V × I × PF. Power factor (PF) accounts for reactive components. Typical PF = 0.85-0.95. Lower PF = less efficient energy usage. Capacitor banks used for correction.
What's the difference between AC and DC current? +
DC: constant direction, constant magnitude. AC: alternates direction periodically (60 Hz US, 50 Hz Europe). DC simpler for calculations. AC requires accounting for reactance, impedance, power factor. Most homes use AC distribution.
How do you calculate total power in a circuit? +
Depends on circuit configuration. Series circuits: same current through all components, voltages add. Total power = sum of component powers. Parallel circuits: voltage same across all, currents add. Total power = sum of branch powers.
When must you use the power formulas instead of basic Ohms Law? +
Use power formulas when given power and need other values. Examples: P = I² × R (given power and resistance, find current), P = V² / R (given power and resistance, find voltage). All three power equations equivalent, choose based on known values.
What's the significance of 5% voltage drop limit? +
NEC (National Electrical Code) recommends max 5% voltage drop. Beyond 5%: equipment malfunction, heat generation, energy waste. Applies to branch circuits (3%) and feeders (2%). Designer must choose adequate wire size to maintain within limits.