ResistorColorBands Cheat Sheet: Color Codes, Multipliers, and Tolerances

ResistorColorBands Decoder: From Bands to Resistance Values

What resistor color bands represent

Resistor color bands encode a resistor’s nominal resistance, tolerance, and sometimes temperature coefficient. Most common resistors use 4, 5, or 6 bands:

  • 4 bands: digit, digit, multiplier, tolerance
  • 5 bands: digit, digit, digit, multiplier, tolerance
  • 6 bands: digit, digit, digit, multiplier, tolerance, temperature coefficient (ppm/K)

Standard color-to-value chart

Color Digit Multiplier Tolerance Temp. Coefficient (ppm/K)
Black 0 10^0
Brown 1 10^1 ±1% 100
Red 2 10^2 ±2% 50
Orange 3 10^3 15
Yellow 4 10^4 25
Green 5 10^5 ±0.5%
Blue 6 10^6 ±0.25% 10
Violet 7 10^7 ±0.1% 5
Gray 8 10^8 ±0.05%
White 9 10^9
Gold 10^-1 ±5%
Silver 10^-2 ±10%
None ±20%

Step-by-step decoding method

  1. Identify the number of bands (4, 5, or 6).
  2. Read the first digits from the first 2 (4-band) or 3 (⁄6-band) colored bands and convert to digits using the chart.
  3. Apply the multiplier (the band immediately after the digit bands) as a power of ten from the chart. Multiply the digit value by that factor.
  4. Read the tolerance band (usually the last visible colored band except for 6-band where an extra band follows). Use the tolerance column to find percentage.
  5. For 6-band resistors, read the final band for the temperature coefficient in ppm/K.
  6. Express the result using appropriate units (ohms, kiloohms, megaohms). Example unit thresholds: ≥1,000 → kΩ; ≥1,000,000 → MΩ.

Quick examples

  • 4-band: Red, Violet, Yellow, Gold

    • Digits: 2 (red), 7 (violet) → 27
    • Multiplier: Yellow = 10^4 → 27 × 10,000 = 270,000 Ω = 270 kΩ
    • Tolerance: Gold = ±5% → 270 kΩ ±5%
  • 5-band: Brown, Black, Black, Red, Brown

    • Digits: 1, 0, 0 → 100
    • Multiplier: Red = 10^2 → 100 × 100 = 10,000 Ω = 10 kΩ
    • Tolerance: Brown = ±1% → 10 kΩ ±1%
  • 6-band: Green, Blue, Black, Orange, Brown, Red

    • Digits: 5, 6, 0 → 560
    • Multiplier: Orange = 10^3 → 560 × 1,000 = 560,000 Ω = 560 kΩ
    • Tolerance: Brown = ±1%
    • Temp. coeff.: Red = 50 ppm/K

Common pitfalls and tips

  • Band order matters: hold the resistor so the tolerance band (often gold/silver or separated) is on the right.
  • Faded or dirty bands can be misleading—use a magnifier and good lighting.
  • Some manufacturers place the tolerance band offset slightly; look for a small gap at one end.
  • For SMD resistors, color bands aren’t used—read the printed code.

Quick reference conversion

  • Multiply by 10^3 → add “kΩ”; by 10^6 → add “MΩ”.
  • Tolerance gives the resistance range: R_min = R × (1 − tol), R_max = R × (1 + tol).

Use this decoder method to read color-banded resistors reliably in circuits and prototyping.

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