Why Divider Current Matters
A voltage divider is simple, yet it can mislead designers. Two resistors create a smaller voltage from a larger supply. That idea works well when the output does not feed a heavy load. Once a load is connected, the lower branch resistance changes. The output voltage can sag. The current can rise. Power loss can also become important.
This calculator includes current because voltage alone is not enough. It estimates no load output, loaded output, branch currents, total source current, and resistor power. These values help you choose safe resistor ratings. They also help you decide whether the divider can drive a sensor, input pin, or test circuit.
Design Notes
A strong divider uses lower resistor values. It holds voltage better under load. The cost is higher current and more heat. A weak divider uses higher resistor values. It saves energy, but the output is easier to disturb. The best choice depends on load resistance, allowed current, noise limits, and power budget.
For logic inputs, the load is often very large. A higher value divider may work. For analog inputs, the sampling circuit can draw short pulses. A buffer amplifier may be better. For motors, relays, lamps, and modules, a divider is usually a poor supply method. Use a regulator instead.
The load resistance should normally be much larger than the lower divider resistor. A common starting rule is ten times larger. This keeps voltage error smaller. It is still only a guide. Always calculate the loaded value and verify it in the real circuit.
Practical Use
Enter the supply voltage, upper resistor, lower resistor, and optional load. Add source resistance if it matters. The result shows the divider ratio and current paths. Check the power values against resistor wattage ratings. Leave margin for temperature, tolerance, and supply variation.
Use standard resistor values after the first estimate. Then run the calculator again. Compare unloaded and loaded voltage. If the drop is too large, lower the divider resistors, increase load resistance, or add a buffer. A reliable divider should meet voltage, current, and thermal limits together.
Document each assumption. Note units clearly. Small mistakes in prefixes can change current and power by large factors during bench testing.