Impedance Calculator

Calculate AC impedance, reactance, phase angle, resonance, power factor, current, and circuit behavior for RC, RL, LC, and RLC circuits.

Calculator is for informational purposes only. Terms and Conditions

1

Choose what to solve for

Select the circuit type, connection, and target result.

Choose the components included in the ideal lumped-element AC circuit model.
Series adds impedances. Parallel adds admittances, then inverts to get total impedance.
Resonance solve modes require a circuit containing both L and C.
Presets only change units and example defaults, not the governing equations.
Enter R, L, C, and frequency to calculate total impedance.
2

Enter the known values

Fill in the visible fields. The calculator updates automatically.

Use the real resistance in the circuit. In real inductors, this may include winding resistance.
Inductance creates positive reactance. Its opposition increases as frequency increases.
Capacitance creates negative reactance. Its opposition decreases as frequency increases.
Frequency must be greater than zero for capacitor or inductor impedance calculations.
Optional. Enter RMS voltage to estimate RMS current, apparent power, real power, and reactive power.
Advanced Options
3

Circuit and phasor visual

The visual updates with the selected circuit and calculated impedance angle.

AC circuit diagram
Impedance phasor diagram
4

Solution

Live result, quick checks, warnings, and calculation steps.

Impedance Magnitude
Ω
Real-time result updates as you type.

Quick checks

  • Complex impedance
  • Phase angle
  • Net reactance
  • Inductive reactance
  • Capacitive reactance
  • Circuit behavior

Source, standards, and assumptions

Educational AC circuit model

  • Source/standard: Standard engineering formula or educational calculation method. No single governing code standard is required for this simplified calculation.
  • Calculation basis: Ideal sinusoidal steady-state AC circuit analysis using complex impedance.
  • Series circuits add impedance directly. Parallel circuits add branch admittance and invert the total.
  • This is a lumped-element AC circuit calculator, not a PCB trace, microstrip, stripline, differential pair, antenna, or transmission-line impedance calculator.
Show solution steps See known values, equations, substitutions, and interpretation
  1. Enter values to see the full solution steps and checks.

What Is Impedance?

Impedance is the total opposition an AC circuit presents to current. It includes ordinary resistance plus frequency-dependent reactance from inductors and capacitors. Resistance is the real part of impedance, while reactance is the imaginary part. The result is commonly written as a complex value, such as Z = R + jX.

Use this impedance calculator when you want to calculate AC circuit impedance, RLC impedance, reactance, phase angle, power factor, resonant frequency, or the capacitance or inductance needed for resonance. The calculator above is designed for ideal lumped-element circuits, not PCB trace impedance or transmission-line impedance.

Best used for RC, RL, LC, and RLC AC circuits
Main result Complex impedance, magnitude, phase angle
Key warning Real components include ESR, ESL, and parasitics

Direct answer

Impedance is calculated by combining resistance and reactance as a complex number. For a series RLC circuit, the common formula is Z = R + j(XL − XC), where XL = 2πfL and XC = 1/(2πfC).

Impedance Formula

The most useful impedance formulas depend on whether the circuit is series or parallel. In a series circuit, component impedances are added directly. In a parallel circuit, the easiest method is to add admittances first, then invert the result.

Series RLC Impedance

\[ Z = R + j(X_L – X_C) \]

Use this equation when the resistor, inductor, and capacitor are connected in one path and the same current flows through each component.

Impedance Magnitude

\[ |Z| = \sqrt{R^2 + (X_L – X_C)^2} \]

The magnitude tells you the size of the impedance in ohms. It is the value most users expect when they ask for “total impedance.”

Parallel Impedance

\[ Y = \frac{1}{Z_R} + \frac{1}{Z_L} + \frac{1}{Z_C} \qquad Z = \frac{1}{Y} \]

In parallel AC circuits, admittance is usually cleaner than trying to combine impedance values directly.

Reactance and Resonance

\[ X_L = 2\pi fL \qquad X_C = \frac{1}{2\pi fC} \qquad f_0 = \frac{1}{2\pi\sqrt{LC}} \]

Inductive reactance increases with frequency. Capacitive reactance decreases with frequency. Resonance occurs when the two are equal in magnitude.

What the Impedance Variables Mean

Most wrong impedance calculations come from mixing units, using frequency incorrectly, or forgetting that capacitor reactance is negative in the complex impedance model. The table below summarizes the variables used by the calculator.

Impedance calculator variables and meanings
SymbolMeaningWhat to Enter or Review
ZImpedanceTotal AC opposition to current, expressed as a complex value or magnitude in ohms
RResistanceThe real part of impedance; dissipates energy as heat
XReactanceThe imaginary part of impedance from inductors and capacitors
XLInductive reactancePositive reactance from an inductor; increases as frequency increases
XCCapacitive reactanceCapacitive opposition; decreases as frequency increases and appears negative in impedance
fFrequencyThe AC signal frequency in Hz, kHz, MHz, or GHz
LInductanceEntered in pH, nH, µH, mH, or H depending on the scale of the circuit
CCapacitanceEntered in pF, nF, µF, mF, or F depending on the scale of the circuit
θPhase angleShows whether the circuit behaves more inductively, capacitively, or resistively

How to Use the Impedance Calculator

The calculator above is built for the way people actually search for this topic: some users need a quick impedance magnitude, while others need the complex result, phase angle, resonant frequency, or a missing L or C value for resonance.

1

Select the circuit type

Choose R, C, L, RC, RL, LC, or RLC. This controls which inputs are visible and which formulas are used.

2

Choose series or parallel

For a series circuit, impedance values add directly. For a parallel circuit, the calculator adds admittance and then converts back to impedance.

3

Enter R, L, C, and frequency

Use the unit dropdowns carefully. Electronics problems commonly mix ohms, microhenries, nanofarads, and kilohertz.

4

Review the complex result

The magnitude tells you the size of impedance, but the complex form and phase angle tell you whether the circuit is inductive, capacitive, or mostly resistive.

5

Use the optional voltage input for current and power

If you enter RMS voltage, the calculator estimates RMS current, apparent power, real power, reactive power, and power factor.

Important calculator limitation

This calculator assumes an ideal lumped-element circuit. It does not calculate PCB trace impedance, microstrip impedance, stripline impedance, antenna impedance, or transmission-line behavior.

Series vs. Parallel Impedance

Series and parallel AC circuits can contain the same components but produce very different impedance results. This is why the calculator includes a connection selector instead of treating every RLC circuit the same way.

Series and parallel impedance comparison
Circuit TypeBest Calculation MethodWhat Happens Near Resonance
Series RC, RL, LC, or RLCAdd component impedances directlyIn a series RLC circuit, impedance can dip near resonance because inductive and capacitive reactance cancel
Parallel RC, RL, LC, or RLCAdd admittances, then invertIn an ideal parallel LC/RLC circuit, impedance can peak near resonance because branch susceptances cancel

Engineering interpretation

In a series circuit, a low impedance can allow high current. In a parallel circuit, a high impedance can occur near resonance even though large currents may circulate inside the inductor and capacitor branches.

How Reactance Changes With Frequency

Impedance is important because inductors and capacitors do not behave like simple fixed resistors. Their reactance changes with frequency, which is why the same circuit can behave differently at 60 Hz, 1 kHz, 1 MHz, or 1 GHz.

Inductor

XL = 2πfL. As frequency rises, inductive reactance rises.

Capacitor

XC = 1/(2πfC). As frequency rises, capacitive reactance falls.

RLC Circuit

At one frequency, the inductor and capacitor can cancel each other’s reactance.

This frequency dependence is why impedance matters in filters, audio crossovers, resonant tanks, power factor problems, RF circuits, and AC circuit homework. Khan Academy summarizes the same relationship: inductor impedance is directly proportional to frequency, while capacitor impedance is inversely proportional to frequency. Review impedance versus frequency.

How to Read the Phasor Diagram

A phasor diagram is one of the clearest ways to understand impedance. The horizontal axis represents the real resistance part of impedance. The vertical axis represents reactance. The diagonal vector represents the total impedance.

Positive angle

A positive phase angle usually means the circuit is inductive. Current lags voltage.

Negative angle

A negative phase angle usually means the circuit is capacitive. Current leads voltage.

Near zero angle

A phase angle near zero means the circuit is mostly resistive or near resonance.

Magnitude

The length of the impedance vector is the impedance magnitude, written as |Z|.

The calculator’s phasor visual updates as the result changes so users can connect the numeric phase angle to the physical circuit behavior.

Step-by-Step Worked Example

The following example shows how a typical series RLC impedance calculation works. This mirrors what the calculator does automatically.

Scenario

Circuit
Series RLC circuit
Resistance
R = 100 Ω
Inductance
L = 10 µH
Capacitance
C = 100 nF
Frequency
f = 1 kHz

Calculate Reactance

\[ X_L = 2\pi fL = 2\pi(1000)(10\times10^{-6}) \approx 0.0628\ \Omega \]
\[ X_C = \frac{1}{2\pi fC} = \frac{1}{2\pi(1000)(100\times10^{-9})} \approx 1591.55\ \Omega \]

Combine the Impedance

\[ Z = 100 + j(0.0628 – 1591.55) \]
\[ Z \approx 100 – j1591.49\ \Omega \]

Result

Impedance magnitude: approximately 1594.63 Ω. The circuit is strongly capacitive at 1 kHz because capacitive reactance is much larger than inductive reactance.

How to Interpret It

Even though the resistor is 100 Ω, the capacitor dominates at this frequency. Increasing the frequency would reduce capacitive reactance and move the circuit closer to resonance.

Resonance in RLC Circuits

Resonance occurs when inductive reactance and capacitive reactance are equal in magnitude. At that frequency, the reactive effects cancel in the ideal model.

Resonant Frequency

\[ f_0 = \frac{1}{2\pi\sqrt{LC}} \]

The calculator can solve directly for resonant frequency when inductance and capacitance are known.

Capacitance Needed for Resonance

\[ C = \frac{1}{(2\pi f_0)^2L} \]

Use this when you know the target frequency and inductor value.

Inductance Needed for Resonance

\[ L = \frac{1}{(2\pi f_0)^2C} \]

Use this when you know the target frequency and capacitor value.

Series and parallel resonance are not the same

In a series RLC circuit, impedance reaches a minimum near resonance. In an ideal parallel resonant circuit, impedance can reach a maximum. LibreTexts describes series RLC resonance as the condition where inductive reactance equals capacitive reactance and impedance is minimized. Review AC resonance.

Power Factor and Phase Angle

If you enter RMS voltage into the calculator, the tool can estimate current and AC power values. This is useful when impedance is being used to understand current draw, apparent power, real power, or reactive power.

Power and phase outputs from impedance
OutputMeaningWhy It Matters
Phase angleAngle between voltage and currentShows whether current leads or lags voltage
Power factorcosine of the phase angle magnitudeIndicates how effectively apparent power becomes real power
Apparent powerVoltage multiplied by currentMeasured in volt-amperes, or VA
Real powerPower dissipated by the resistive partMeasured in watts, or W
Reactive powerPower exchanged with fields in L and CMeasured in volt-ampere reactive, or VAR

A positive phase angle usually means an inductive circuit. A negative phase angle usually means a capacitive circuit. A phase angle near zero means the circuit is mostly resistive.

Practical Limits of an Ideal Impedance Calculation

A calculator can return a mathematically correct impedance while still missing important real-world behavior. This is especially true at high frequency, near resonance, or when using real capacitors and inductors.

Capacitor ESR

Real capacitors have equivalent series resistance, leakage, dielectric loss, and voltage-dependent behavior.

Inductor winding resistance

Real inductors have copper resistance, core losses, saturation limits, and self-resonant frequency.

PCB layout effects

At high frequencies, traces, vias, ground return paths, and component placement can dominate the result.

Transmission-line behavior

Microstrip, stripline, coax, antennas, and differential pairs require transmission-line impedance methods.

Engineering judgment

Use the calculator for ideal AC circuit analysis, homework, early design checks, and conceptual comparison. For final RF, PCB, power electronics, or high-current design, verify with component datasheets, measurement, simulation, and layout-aware analysis.

Common Impedance Calculator Mistakes

These are the most common reasons users get an impedance result that looks correct but does not match the physical circuit.

Common Don’ts

  • Use capacitance in µF while the formula assumes farads
  • Forget that capacitive reactance is negative in complex impedance
  • Treat series and parallel RLC circuits as if they use the same formula
  • Assume resonance always means low impedance
  • Ignore ESR, winding resistance, and layout effects at high frequency
  • Use this calculator for PCB trace impedance or differential pair impedance

Better Checks

  • Use the calculator’s unit dropdowns instead of manually converting everything
  • Review both impedance magnitude and complex impedance
  • Check the phase angle to identify inductive or capacitive behavior
  • Compare the entered frequency to the resonant frequency
  • Add real resistance when modeling real inductors or lossy circuits
  • Use PCB or RF-specific tools when geometry and transmission lines matter

Frequently Asked Questions

What does an impedance calculator do?

An impedance calculator finds the total AC opposition of a circuit. A good calculator should show impedance magnitude, complex impedance, phase angle, reactance, resonance, and circuit behavior.

What is the formula for impedance in a series RLC circuit?

For a series RLC circuit, impedance is commonly written as Z = R + j(XL − XC). The magnitude is |Z| = √[R² + (XL − XC)²].

How do you calculate capacitive reactance?

Capacitive reactance is calculated as XC = 1/(2πfC). It decreases as frequency or capacitance increases.

How do you calculate inductive reactance?

Inductive reactance is calculated as XL = 2πfL. It increases as frequency or inductance increases.

What does a negative impedance angle mean?

A negative impedance phase angle usually means the circuit is capacitive overall. In that case, current leads voltage.

What does a positive impedance angle mean?

A positive impedance phase angle usually means the circuit is inductive overall. In that case, current lags voltage.

What happens to impedance at resonance?

In an ideal series RLC circuit, impedance is minimized near resonance. In an ideal parallel LC or RLC circuit, impedance can become very high near resonance.

Is impedance the same as resistance?

No. Resistance is only the real part of impedance. Impedance includes both resistance and reactance, so it can have magnitude and phase.

Can this calculator be used for PCB trace impedance?

No. This calculator is for lumped-element AC circuits. PCB trace impedance, microstrip, stripline, and differential pair impedance require geometry-based transmission-line calculations.

Why is impedance frequency dependent?

Impedance is frequency dependent when inductors or capacitors are present. Inductor reactance increases with frequency, while capacitor reactance decreases with frequency.

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