If you’ve ever seen numbers like 60 dB or +3 dB on audio gear, radios, or electronics, you’re looking at a decibel (dB) value. But what does it actually mean โ and how do you calculate it?
Letโs break it down in plain language โ no engineering degree needed!
Table of Contents
๐ What is a dB?
dB (decibel) is a logarithmic unit used to compare two power or voltage levels.
Itโs not an absolute number โ itโs a ratio. You use it to express how much stronger or weaker one signal is compared to another.
๐งฎ The dB Formulas
Here are the two main formulas used to calculate dB, depending on whether you’re comparing power or voltage:
๐ Power Ratio Formula
dB = 10 ร log10(P2 / P1)
- P2 = measured power
- P1 = reference power
โก Voltage Ratio Formula (same impedance*)
dB = 20 ร log10(V2 / V1)
- V2 = measured voltage
- V1 = reference voltage
โฌ๏ธ Example 1: Power Increase
You go from 1 mW to 10 mW:
dB = 10 ร log10(10 / 1) = 10 ร 1 = 10 dB
That means the power has increased by 10 dB.
โฌ๏ธ Example 2: Voltage Drop
Voltage drops from 5V to 2.5V:
dB = 20 ร log10(2.5 / 5) = 20 ร log10(0.5) โ -6.02 dB
This means a decrease of 6 dB.

๐ก Bonus Tip: What Do dB Values Mean?
- +3 dB โ double the power
- -3 dB โ half the power
- +10 dB = 10ร more power
- -10 dB = 10ร less power
Sure! Here's a brief and easy-to-understand explanation you can add to the article:
๐ * What Does Impedance Mean in dB Calculations?
When using the voltage formula for dB (20 ร logโโ(Vโ / Vโ)), it assumes that the impedance stays the same across both measurements.
Impedance is like resistance, but for AC signals โ it affects how voltage and current behave in circuits. If the impedance changes between Vโ and Vโ, the dB result may not accurately reflect a power difference.
So in short:
When using the voltage dB formula, make sure the signals are measured across the same or equal impedance โ usually 50ฮฉ or 75ฮฉ in electronics.