PCB Trace Resistance Calculator
Find the DC resistance, voltage drop and power loss of a copper PCB trace from its width, copper weight, length and temperature - with the substituted formula shown, not a black box.
Method based on IPC-2221C · reviewed June 2026
The cross-section that sets it
DC resistance of a 1 oz trace, 2 in long, at 25 C
| Trace width | Cross-section | Resistance |
|---|---|---|
| 5 mil | 6.9 mil² | 201 mΩ |
| 10 mil | 13.8 mil² | 100 mΩ |
| 15 mil | 20.7 mil² | 67 mΩ |
| 20 mil | 27.6 mil² | 50 mΩ |
| 30 mil | 41.3 mil² | 34 mΩ |
| 50 mil | 68.9 mil² | 20 mΩ |
How trace resistance is calculated
The current flows through the copper cross-section of the trace, which is its width times its thickness. Copper weight sets the thickness: 1 oz/ft2 of copper is about 1.378 mil (roughly 35 micrometres), so a 10 mil wide, 1 oz trace has a cross-section of about 13.8 square mil.
Resistance is then the classic conductor relation R = rho x L / A: resistivity times length divided by area. Annealed copper has a resistivity of about 1.724e-8 ohm-metre at 20 C (the International Annealed Copper Standard, 100% IACS). The calculator converts your width, length and copper weight into consistent units and substitutes them, showing the worked figure rather than a black-box result.
Why temperature matters
Copper's resistivity rises with temperature by about 0.39% per degree C (a temperature coefficient of 0.00393 per C). A trace running at 50 C therefore has roughly 12% more resistance than the same trace at 20 C, which is why the same geometry reads 100 m-ohm at 25 C but 110 m-ohm at 50 C.
For a power trace, that extra resistance feeds back into self-heating: more resistance means more power dissipated for the same current, which raises the temperature further. Size power traces with that loop in mind, and check current capacity separately with the trace-width calculator.
Resistance, voltage drop and power
Once you have the resistance, two practical numbers follow directly. Voltage drop along the trace is V = I x R, which matters for sense lines, references and low-voltage rails where a few tens of millivolts shift a regulation point. Power dissipated in the trace is P = I-squared x R, the heat the copper has to shed.
These are DC, steady-state figures. They do not include skin effect at high frequency, the resistance of vias and connectors in the path, or the cooling effect of adjacent copper pours - all of which a real design has to account for.
Worked examples
Real sizing calls, and the number that decides each one.
| Scenario | Result | Why |
|---|---|---|
| 10 mil, 1 oz, 2 in trace at 25 C carrying 1 A | 100 mΩ, 100 mV, 100 mW | The baseline case: about 0.5 m-ohm per square, 100 squares of length, so 50 m-ohm per inch, doubled for 2 in. |
| The same trace running warm at 50 C | 110 mΩ, 110 mV, 110 mW | Copper resistivity rises about 0.39% per C, so 30 C hotter adds roughly 12%. |
| 6 mil, 1 oz, 1 in signal trace at 25 C, 0.5 A | 84 mΩ, 42 mV, 21 mW | Narrow trace, but short and low current - the drop stays small. |
| 25 mil, 2 oz, 3 in power rail at 25 C, 5 A | 30 mΩ, 151 mV, 753 mW | Wide, heavy copper keeps resistance low, but at 5 A the power loss is still three-quarters of a watt. |
How this relates to other standards
| Standard / tool | Relationship | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| PCB Trace Width | Counterpart of | Trace width sizes the conductor for current capacity to IPC-2221C; this tool gives the resistance, drop and loss of whatever width you settle on. |
| PCB Via Current | Shares the model | A plated via is a short trace; its resistance uses the same R = rho x L / A on the barrel cross-section. |
| IPC-2152 | Companion standard | The test-based current-capacity standard IPC-2221C defers to; trace resistance is the physics underneath both. |
| Annealed copper (IACS) | Material basis | Resistance uses 100% IACS copper, 1.724e-8 ohm-metre at 20 C, rising about 0.39% per degree C. |
Where engineers use this
Voltage-drop budgeting
Low-voltage, high-current rails where a few milliohms of trace resistance eat into regulation and have to be accounted for end to end.
Current sensing and shunts
Knowing the parasitic copper resistance that sits in series with a sense path before it reaches the amplifier.
Kelvin and 4-wire layout
Estimating the trace resistance you are deliberately routing around with separate force and sense connections.
Frequently asked questions
Is trace resistance defined by IPC-2221?
Does this include vias, connectors or skin effect?
How much does temperature change the answer?
Why does 1 oz copper give about 1.378 mil?
What is a reasonable voltage drop to allow?
Related tools
Sources: IPC-2221C, Generic Standard on Printed Board Design (conductor geometry, copper-weight to thickness) · Copper resistivity 1.724e-8 ohm-metre at 20 C and temperature coefficient 0.00393 per C (International Annealed Copper Standard, 100% IACS). Verify against the current edition.