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Voltage Divider Calculator & Guide | Circuit Design 2025

Complete voltage divider guide with formulas, calculations, and free calculator. Learn how to design voltage divider circuits for level shifting and sensor biasing.

Enginist Technical Team
Professional electrical engineers with expertise in power systems, circuit design, and electrical code compliance.
Reviewed by PE-Licensed Electrical Engineers
Published: October 12, 2025
Updated: November 20, 2025

Voltage Divider Calculator & Guide

Quick AnswerHow do you calculate voltage divider output?
Calculate voltage divider output using the resistor ratio formula. Use resistors in 1-10kΩ range and ensure load impedance is at least 10 times the divider impedance to prevent loading effects.
Vout=Vin×R2R1+R2V_{out} = V_{in} \times \frac{R_2}{R_1 + R_2}
Example

5V input with R1=10kΩ and R2=10kΩ gives Vout = 5 × 10k / (10k + 10k) = 2.5V.

Introduction

Voltage divider circuits are fundamental building blocks in electronics. They provide a simple method to produce a specific output voltage from a higher input voltage source, essential for biasing transistors, interfacing sensors, and shifting logic levels.

This guide covers the theoretical derivation, practical design steps, and standard applications of voltage dividers, ensuring your designs are stable, efficient, and compliant with industry standards.

Quick Answer: Calculating Voltage Divider Output

Calculate voltage divider output using the ratio of two series resistors.

What Is the Core Formula for?

Vout=Vin×R2R1+R2V_{out} = V_{in} \times \frac{R_2}{R_1 + R_2}

Where:

  • VoutV_{out} = Output voltage (V)
  • VinV_{in} = Input source voltage (V)
  • R1R_1 = Upper resistor (Ω)
  • R2R_2 = Lower resistor (Ω)

Rearranged Formulas

To FindFormula
Upper Resistor (R1R_1)R1=R2×(VinVout1)R_1 = R_2 \times \left( \frac{V_{in}}{V_{out}} - 1 \right)
Lower Resistor (R2R_2)R2=R1×(1VinVout1)R_2 = R_1 \times \left( \frac{1}{\frac{V_{in}}{V_{out}} - 1} \right)
Input Voltage (VinV_{in})Vin=Vout×R1+R2R2V_{in} = V_{out} \times \frac{R_1 + R_2}{R_2}

What Does the Reference Table Show for?

ParameterTypical RangeStandard
Resistor Values1 kΩ to 10 kΩRecommended
Resistor Tolerance±1% (metal film)Precision
Resistor SeriesE24, E48, E96IEC 60063
Load Impedance>10× divider impedanceRecommended
Power Safety Factor2× calculated powerRecommended

What Are the Key Standards for?

Worked Example

Level Shifting: 12V to 5V

Given:

  • Vin=12V_{in} = 12 V
  • Vout=5V_{out} = 5 V
  • Selected R2=10R_2 = 10

Calculation:

R1=10,000×(1251)=10,000×1.4=14,000ΩR_1 = 10,000 \times \left( \frac{12}{5} - 1 \right) = 10,000 \times 1.4 = 14,000 \, \Omega

Selection: Nearest E24 value is 15 kΩ

Verification: Vout=12×10,00015,000+10,000=4.8V_{out} = 12 \times \frac{10,000}{15,000 + 10,000} = 4.8 V ✔

Result: Use R1 = 15 kΩ and R2 = 10 kΩ for 4.8V output (safe for 5V logic).


1. Theory and Formulas

The Voltage Divider Rule

The voltage divider rule is derived directly from Ohm's Law. In a series circuit, the current (II) is constant through all components, while the voltage drops across each component are proportional to their resistance.

Vout=Vin×R2R1+R2V_{\text{out}} = V_{\text{in}} \times \frac{R_{2}}{R_{1} + R_{2}}

Where:

  • VoutV_{\text{out}} = Output Voltage (Volts)
  • VinV_{\text{in}} = Input Source Voltage (Volts)
  • R1R_1 = Upper Resistor (Ω)
  • R2R_2 = Lower Resistor (Ω)

Derivation

  1. Total Resistance: Rtotal=R1+R2R_{total} = R_1 + R_2
  2. Circuit Current: I=VinRtotal=VinR1+R2I = \frac{V_{in}}{R_{total}} = \frac{V_{in}}{R_1 + R_2}
  3. Output Voltage: Vout=I×R2V_{out} = I \times R_2
  4. Substitution: Vout=(VinR1+R2)×R2V_{out} = \left( \frac{V_{in}}{R_1 + R_2} \right) \times R_2

Rearranged Formulas

Depending on your known variables, use these variations:

To FindFormula
Upper Resistor (R1R_1)R1=R2×(VinVout1)R_1 = R_2 \times \left( \frac{V_{in}}{V_{out}} - 1 \right)
Lower Resistor (R2R_2)R2=R1×(1VinVout1)R_2 = R_1 \times \left( \frac{1}{\frac{V_{in}}{V_{out}} - 1} \right)
Input Voltage (VinV_{in})Vin=Vout×R1+R2R2V_{in} = V_{out} \times \frac{R_1 + R_2}{R_2}

2. Design Steps

Designing a reliable voltage divider involves more than just picking resistors. Follow this standard workflow.

Step 1: Determine Ratios

Identify your input voltage and target output voltage.

Ratio=VoutVin\text{Ratio} = \frac{V_{out}}{V_{in}}

Step 2: Select Base Resistor (R2R_2)

Choose a standard resistor value for R2R_2 in the 1 kΩ to 10 kΩ range.

  • < 1 kΩ: High power consumption, wasted heat.
  • > 100 kΩ: High output impedance, sensitive to noise and loading.

Step 3: Calculate R1R_1

Use the rearranged formula to find the ideal R1R_1. Then, select the nearest standard E24 series value.

Step 4: Verify Power Dissipation

Ensure your resistors can handle the heat.

Ptotal=(Vin)2R1+R2P_{total} = \frac{(V_{in})^2}{R_1 + R_2} Rule of Thumb: Use resistors rated for at least 2x the calculated power.


3. Worked Examples

Level Shifting (12V to 5V)

Scenario: You need to interface a 12V automotive sensor with a 5V microcontroller input.

Given:

  • Vin=12V_{in} = 12 V
  • Vout=5V_{out} = 5 V
  • Selected R2=10R_2 = 10

Calculation:

R1=10,000×(1251)R_1 = 10,000 \times \left( \frac{12}{5} - 1 \right)

R1=10,000×(2.41)=14,000ΩR_1 = 10,000 \times (2.4 - 1) = 14,000 \, \Omega

Selection: 14 kΩ is not a standard value. The nearest E24 values are 13 kΩ and 15 kΩ.

  • If R1=13R_1 = 13 kΩ: Vout=5.21V_{out} = 5.21 V (Too high for some 5V logic)
  • If R1=15R_1 = 15 kΩ: Vout=4.8V_{out} = 4.8 V (Safe logic high)

Result: Use R1 = 15 kΩ and R2 = 10 kΩ.

Battery Monitoring (24V to 3.3V)

Scenario: Monitoring a 24V DC system with a 3.3V ADC.

Given:

  • Vin=24V_{in} = 24 V
  • Vout3.3V_{out} \le 3.3 V
  • Selected R2=2.2R_2 = 2.2

Calculation:

R1=2200×(243.31)13,800ΩR_1 = 2200 \times \left( \frac{24}{3.3} - 1 \right) \approx 13,800 \, \Omega

Selection: Choose R1=15R_1 = 15 kΩ (Standard Value) to ensure VoutV_{out} stays safely below 3.3V.

Check:

Vout=24×2.215+2.2=3.07VV_{out} = 24 \times \frac{2.2}{15 + 2.2} = 3.07 \, V

Result: Safe for ADC.


4. Practical Applications

Microcontroller Level Shifting

Used to step down logic signals (e.g., 5V sensor to 3.3V ESP32 input). Note: Only works for unidirectional signals (Input to MCU).

Sensor Biasing

Resistive sensors like thermistors and photoresistors change resistance based on environment. A voltage divider converts this resistance change into a readable voltage change.

Vout=Vref×RthermistorRfixed+RthermistorV_{out} = V_{ref} \times \frac{R_{thermistor}}{R_{fixed} + R_{thermistor}}

Reference Voltages

Creating a local voltage reference for comparators (e.g., setting a "trigger" voltage at 2.5V). Tip: For precision references, use a Zener diode or dedicated voltage reference IC instead.


5. Design Considerations

The Loading Effect

A common failure in divider design is ignoring the load. When you connect a device (load) to VoutV_{out}, its internal resistance (RLR_L) acts in parallel with R2R_2.

Loaded Output Formula:

Vloaded=Vin×R2RLR1+(R2RL)V_{loaded} = V_{in} \times \frac{R_2 || R_L}{R_1 + (R_2 || R_L)}

Resistor Tolerance

Standard resistors have a ±5%\pm 5\% tolerance. For precise voltage ratios (like battery monitoring), use 1% metal film resistors.

Temperature Stability

Resistors change value as they heat up (Temperature Coefficient).

  • Carbon Composition: High drift (±1000\pm 1000 ppm/°C). Avoid for precision.
  • Metal Film: Low drift (±50\pm 50 ppm/°C). Recommended.

6. Advanced Analysis: AC & Noise

For high-precision or high-frequency applications (e.g., oscilloscope probes, 24-bit ADC front-ends), simple DC analysis is insufficient. You must account for impedance and noise.

Frequency Response (Compensation)

Real resistors have parasitic capacitance (CparC_{par}) in parallel with the resistance. At high frequencies, this forms a capacitive divider that distorts the signal.

Compensated Probe Condition: To ensure flat frequency response, the time constants of the upper and lower sections must match:

R1C1=R2C2R_1 C_1 = R_2 C_2

Where C1C_1 is a tunable capacitor added in parallel to R1R_1. This is why oscilloscope probes have a tuning screw.

Johnson-Nyquist Noise

All resistors generate thermal noise. For high-impedance dividers (e.g., low-power designs), this noise can swamp sensitive signals.

Noise Density Formula:

Vnoise=4kTRΔfV_{noise} = \sqrt{4kTR \Delta f}

Where:

  • kk = Boltzmann's constant (1.38×1023 J/K1.38 \times 10^{-23} \text{ J/K})
  • TT = Temperature (Kelvin)
  • RR = Equivalent parallel resistance (R1R2R_1 || R_2)
  • Δf\Delta f = Bandwidth (Hz)

Design Rule: Keep R1R2R_1 || R_2 low enough so that resistor noise is < 1/2 LSB of your ADC.

General Impedance Formula

For AC circuits, replace resistance (RR) with complex impedance (ZZ):

Vout=Vin×Z2Z1+Z2V_{out} = V_{in} \times \frac{Z_2}{Z_1 + Z_2}

Where ZZ includes:

  • Resistance: ZR=RZ_R = R (purely real)
  • Capacitance: ZC=1jωC=jωCZ_C = \frac{1}{j\omega C} = -\frac{j}{\omega C} (purely imaginary, negative)
  • Inductance: ZL=jωLZ_L = j\omega L (purely imaginary, positive)

For complex impedances in series: Ztotal=Z1+Z2Z_{\text{total}} = Z_1 + Z_2

For complex impedances in parallel: Ztotal=Z1Z2Z1+Z2Z_{\text{total}} = \frac{Z_1 Z_2}{Z_1 + Z_2}


7. Common Mistakes

MistakeConsequenceSolution
Using Low Resistance (< 100Ω)Excessive current drain, battery depletion, overheating.Increase resistor values to kΩ range.
Using High Resistance (> 1 MΩ)Output becomes sensitive to noise and ADC input impedance.Decrease resistor values or use a buffer.
Powering LoadsVoltage drops significantly when load turns on.Never use a divider as a power supply. Use a voltage regulator (LDO/Buck).
Ignoring Power RatingResistors burn out.Calculate P=V2RP = \frac{V^2}{R} and apply 2x safety margin.

Use Our Free Voltage Divider Calculator

Use the Voltage Divider Calculator at the top of this page to instantly compute resistor values and check power dissipation.

Our calculations follow industry best practices and have been validated against real-world scenarios.

Conclusion

Voltage divider circuits are fundamental building blocks in electronics, providing a simple method to produce a specific output voltage from a higher input voltage source. The basic formula Vout = Vin × (R2 / (R1 + R2)) is derived directly from Ohm's Law and applies to any two-resistor series circuit. Key design considerations include selecting appropriate resistor values (1-10 kΩ range), accounting for loading effects (load impedance should be >10× divider impedance), calculating power dissipation, and using standard E24 series resistor values. Voltage dividers are ideal for level shifting, sensor biasing, reference voltage generation, and battery voltage monitoring, but should never be used to power loads—use voltage regulators for that purpose.

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What Are the Key Takeaways from?

  • Calculate voltage divider output using Vout = Vin × (R2 / (R1 + R2))—the output voltage is proportional to the input voltage based on the resistor ratio
  • Select resistor values in the 1-10 kΩ range for general applications—values <1 kΩ waste power, values >100 kΩ are noise-sensitive
  • Account for loading effects—connect load impedance at least 10× higher than divider impedance, or use an op-amp buffer to prevent voltage drop
  • Calculate power dissipation using P = Vin² / (R1 + R2) and select resistors rated for at least 2× calculated power for reliability
  • Use standard E24 series resistor values (IEC 60063) and 1% tolerance metal film resistors for precision applications
  • Never use voltage dividers to power loads—the output voltage varies with load current; use voltage regulators (LDO or buck converter) instead
  • For AC circuits, replace resistance with complex impedance Z = R + jX, where X includes capacitive and inductive reactance

Where Can You Learn More About?

What Are the References for & Standards?

This guide follows established engineering principles and standards. For detailed requirements, always consult the current adopted edition in your jurisdiction.

Primary Standards

IEC 60063 Preferred number series for resistors and capacitors. Defines E24, E48, E96, and E192 standard value series used for resistor selection in voltage divider circuits. Ensures availability and compatibility of resistor values.

IEC 60364-5-52 Low-voltage electrical installations - Part 5-52: Selection and erection of electrical equipment - Wiring systems. Provides guidance on resistor selection, power rating requirements, and safety considerations for electrical installations.

Supporting Standards & Guidelines

IEC 60050 - International Electrotechnical Vocabulary International standards for electrical terminology and definitions, including voltage divider and circuit analysis terms.

Further Reading

  • Horowitz & Hill: The Art of Electronics, 3rd Edition - Comprehensive reference on circuit design and analysis
  • ASTM B193 - Standard Test Method for Resistivity of Electrical Conductor Materials

Note: Standards and codes are regularly updated. Always verify you're using the current adopted edition applicable to your project's location. Consult with local authorities having jurisdiction (AHJ) for specific requirements.


Disclaimer: This guide provides general technical information based on international electrical standards. Always verify calculations with applicable local electrical codes (NEC, IEC, BS 7671, etc.) and consult licensed electrical engineers or electricians for actual installations. Electrical work should only be performed by qualified professionals. Component ratings and specifications may vary by manufacturer.

Frequently Asked Questions

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