Electric Resistance Converter
Convert electric resistance measurements.
Popular Electric Resistance Conversions
Complete List of Electric Resistance Units for Conversion
1 Milliohm [mΩ] = 0.00100000 Ohm [Ω]
1 Microohm [µΩ] = 0.00000100000 Ohm [Ω]
1 Nanoohm [nΩ] = 1.00000e-9 Ohm [Ω]
1 Kiloohm [kΩ] = 1000.00 Ohm [Ω]
1 Megaohm [MΩ] = 1.00000e+6 Ohm [Ω]
1 Gigaohm [GΩ] = 1.00000e+9 Ohm [Ω]
1 Teraohm [TΩ] = 1.00000e+12 Ohm [Ω]
1 Abohm [abΩ] = 1.00000e-9 Ohm [Ω]
1 Statohm [statΩ] = 8.98755e+11 Ohm [Ω]
How this electric resistance converter works
Ohm (Ω) is used as the internal base unit. Every value you enter is first converted to Ohm using exact SI factors, then translated to the requested unit with the same data pulled from the SI Brochure and NIST SP 811.
Key electric resistance relationships
- 1 Milliohm = 0.001 Ohm
- 1 Microohm = 1.0000e-6 Ohm
- 1 Nanoohm = 1.0000e-9 Ohm
- 1 Kiloohm = 1,000 Ohm
- 1 Megaohm = 1.0000e+6 Ohm
Where electric resistance units are used
Electrical engineers, PCB designers, and maintenance teams convert these electrical quantities while specifying circuits, troubleshooting faults, and documenting test data. The electric resistance converter covers real-world units such as Ohm and Milliohm, giving teams a trusted reference when cross-checking data between labs, suppliers, and regulatory filings.
Tips for accurate electric resistance conversions
- Always verify the unit symbol in your worksheet—this converter normalizes values through Ohm, which is the SI reference for electric resistance measurements.
- When jumping between Ohm and Milliohm, watch metric prefixes and rounding. A misplaced milli-, micro-, or kilo- prefix can produce errors of several orders of magnitude.
- Document the context (test conditions, instrument resolution, uncertainty) whenever you publish electric resistance conversions so coworkers and auditors can reproduce your results.