Inquire: Call 0086-755-23203480, or reach out via the form below/your sales contact to discuss our design, manufacturing, and assembly capabilities.
Quote: Email your PCB files to Sales@pcbsync.com (Preferred for large files) or submit online. We will contact you promptly. Please ensure your email is correct.
Notes: For PCB fabrication, we require PCB design file in Gerber RS-274X format (most preferred), *.PCB/DDB (Protel, inform your program version) format or *.BRD (Eagle) format. For PCB assembly, we require PCB design file in above mentioned format, drilling file and BOM. Click to download BOM template To avoid file missing, please include all files into one folder and compress it into .zip or .rar format.
150 Ohm Resistor: Color Code, Specifications & LED Circuit Applications
The 150 ohm resistor holds a special place in electronics workbenches around the world. If you’ve ever connected an LED to a 5V power supply and wondered what resistor to use, chances are a 150 ohm resistor was the answer. It’s one of those values that hits a sweet spot for common circuit configurations.
I’ve grabbed for this resistor value more times than I can count when prototyping LED circuits on breadboards. The brown-green-brown color pattern becomes instantly recognizable after you’ve built a few Arduino projects or microcontroller circuits.
What is a 150 Ohm Resistor?
A 150 ohm resistor provides exactly 150 ohms of electrical resistance to current flow. This value belongs to the standard E24 series, making it readily available from any electronics supplier in various package types and power ratings.
What makes this particular value so useful? It calculates out perfectly for driving standard LEDs from 5V logic supplies. When you run the numbers with a typical 2V forward voltage LED at 20mA, you get exactly 150 ohms. This mathematical coincidence makes the 150 ohm resistor the go-to choice for countless LED indicator circuits.
Key Specifications of 150 Ohm Resistors
Parameter
Typical Value
Notes
Resistance
150 Ω
E24 standard value
Common Tolerances
±5%, ±1%
Gold or Brown tolerance band
Power Ratings
1/8W, 1/4W, 1/2W, 1W
1/4W most common
Temperature Coefficient
50-250 ppm/K
Varies by construction type
Maximum Voltage
200-500V
Depends on power rating
Operating Temperature
-55°C to +155°C
Typical range
150 Ohm Resistor Color Code
Identifying a 150 ohm resistor by its color bands is straightforward. The distinctive brown-green-brown pattern stands out clearly once you know what to look for.
4-Band 150 Ohm Resistor Color Code
The standard 4-band configuration is what you’ll encounter most frequently:
Band Position
Color
Value
Meaning
1st Band
Brown
1
First significant digit
2nd Band
Green
5
Second significant digit
3rd Band
Brown
×10
Multiplier
4th Band
Gold
±5%
Tolerance
Reading it: Brown-Green-Brown-Gold gives you 15 × 10 = 150Ω with ±5% tolerance.
With a 5% tolerance, your actual resistance falls between 142.5Ω and 157.5Ω. For LED current limiting and most general applications, this tolerance works perfectly fine.
5-Band 150 Ohm Resistor Color Code
For precision applications requiring tighter tolerance:
Band Position
Color
Value
Meaning
1st Band
Brown
1
First significant digit
2nd Band
Green
5
Second significant digit
3rd Band
Black
0
Third significant digit
4th Band
Black
×1
Multiplier
5th Band
Brown
±1%
Tolerance
The 5-band code Brown-Green-Black-Black-Brown represents 150 × 1 = 150Ω with ±1% tolerance.
6-Band 150 Ohm Resistor Color Code
When temperature stability matters:
Band Position
Color
Value
Meaning
1st Band
Brown
1
First significant digit
2nd Band
Green
5
Second significant digit
3rd Band
Black
0
Third significant digit
4th Band
Black
×1
Multiplier
5th Band
Brown
±1%
Tolerance
6th Band
Brown
100 ppm/K
Temperature coefficient
Complete Color Code Reference Chart
Color
Digit
Multiplier
Tolerance
Black
0
×1
–
Brown
1
×10
±1%
Red
2
×100
±2%
Orange
3
×1,000
–
Yellow
4
×10,000
–
Green
5
×100,000
±0.5%
Blue
6
×1,000,000
±0.25%
Violet
7
–
±0.1%
Gray
8
–
±0.05%
White
9
–
–
Gold
–
×0.1
±5%
Silver
–
×0.01
±10%
SMD 150 Ohm Resistor Markings
Surface mount 150 ohm resistors use numerical codes instead of color bands. Understanding these markings prevents confusion during board assembly or rework.
3-Digit SMD Code
A 150 ohm resistor in 3-digit format is marked 151.
Breaking it down:
First two digits (15) = significant figures
Third digit (1) = number of zeros to add = one zero
Result: 15 + one zero = 150Ω
Important: Don’t confuse code 150 with 150 ohms. The code 150 actually means 15Ω (15 with zero zeros added). This trips up even experienced technicians.
4-Digit SMD Code
Precision SMD resistors use 1500 for 150 ohms:
First three digits (150) = significant figures
Fourth digit (0) = multiplier = ×1
Result: 150 × 1 = 150Ω
EIA-96 Code
For 1% tolerance SMDs, the EIA-96 system marks 150Ω as 02B:
02 = code for 150 in the E96 lookup table
B = multiplier of ×10
SMD Marking System
Code for 150Ω
Typical Tolerance
3-Digit
151
±5%
4-Digit
1500
±1%
EIA-96
02B
±1%
SMD Package Sizes and Power Ratings
Package
Dimensions (mm)
Typical Power Rating
0201
0.6 × 0.3
1/20W (0.05W)
0402
1.0 × 0.5
1/16W (0.063W)
0603
1.6 × 0.8
1/10W (0.1W)
0805
2.0 × 1.25
1/8W (0.125W)
1206
3.2 × 1.6
1/4W (0.25W)
2010
5.0 × 2.5
1/2W (0.5W)
2512
6.3 × 3.2
1W
150 Ohm Resistor for LED Circuits
This is where the 150 ohm resistor truly shines. The math works out almost perfectly for 5V LED applications, making it the standard recommendation across countless tutorials and reference designs.
The LED Current Limiting Calculation
The formula is simple: R = (Vsupply – Vforward) / I
For a typical red or yellow LED:
Supply voltage: 5V
LED forward voltage: ~2V
Desired current: 20mA
Calculation: (5V – 2V) / 0.020A = 150Ω
A 150 ohm resistor delivers exactly 20mA to your LED, which is the standard operating current for most indicator LEDs.
LED Current with 150 Ohm Resistor at Various Voltages
Supply Voltage
LED Type
Forward Voltage
Current
Brightness
3.3V
Red
2.0V
8.7mA
Dim
5V
Red
2.0V
20mA
Full
5V
Yellow
2.0V
20mA
Full
5V
Green
2.2V
18.7mA
Full
5V
Blue
3.2V
12mA
Moderate
5V
White
3.2V
12mA
Moderate
9V
Red
2.0V
46.7mA
Overdrive!
12V
Red
2.0V
66.7mA
Damage risk
Warning: At 9V or 12V, a 150 ohm resistor passes too much current for standard LEDs. Use 330Ω or 470Ω for higher voltage applications.
Power Dissipation in the Resistor
Always check that your resistor can handle the heat:
Scenario
Voltage Drop
Current
Power Dissipation
5V, Red LED
3V
20mA
60mW
5V, Blue LED
1.8V
12mA
21.6mW
9V, Red LED
7V
46.7mA
327mW
12V, Red LED
10V
66.7mA
667mW
A standard 1/4W (250mW) 150 ohm resistor handles 5V LED circuits easily. At 9V or 12V, you’d need a 1/2W or 1W resistor if you insist on using this value.
Applications for 150 Ohm Resistors
Beyond LED circuits, the 150 ohm resistor finds use in various applications across electronics design.
Common Circuit Applications
Application
Purpose
Typical Configuration
LED current limiting
Protect LEDs from overcurrent
Series with LED, 5V supply
Arduino indicator lights
Status LEDs on GPIO pins
GPIO → 150Ω → LED → GND
Pull-up/pull-down
Set logic levels
Between signal and rail
Voltage dividers
Scale down voltages
Paired with other resistors
RC timing circuits
Set time constants
With capacitors
Audio signal conditioning
Impedance matching
In signal paths
Transistor biasing
Set operating point
Base or emitter circuits
Current sensing
Measure small currents
In series with load
150 Ohm vs. Neighboring Values
Resistor Value
5V LED Current
Best For
100Ω
30mA
Maximum brightness (risky)
120Ω
25mA
Bright LEDs
150Ω
20mA
Standard operation
180Ω
16.7mA
Slightly dimmer, longer life
220Ω
13.6mA
Lower power, adequate brightness
330Ω
9.1mA
Dim but visible
The 150 ohm resistor hits the sweet spot for full brightness at the LED’s rated current.
Types of 150 Ohm Resistors
Different construction types suit different applications:
Resistor Types and Characteristics
Type
Tolerance
Temperature Coefficient
Best Applications
Carbon Film
±5%
±200-500 ppm/K
General purpose, hobbyist
Metal Film
±1%
±50-100 ppm/K
Precision circuits
Thick Film SMD
±1-5%
±100-200 ppm/K
Production boards
Thin Film SMD
±0.1-1%
±25-50 ppm/K
High precision
Wirewound
±1-5%
±20-100 ppm/K
High power
For LED current limiting, a standard carbon film 150 ohm resistor works perfectly. Precision circuits may warrant metal film types for better stability.
How to Measure a 150 Ohm Resistor
Verification is always a good idea, especially with old or unknown components.
Multimeter Measurement Steps
Set your multimeter to resistance mode (Ω)
Select the 200Ω or 2kΩ range
Touch probes to each lead of the resistor
Read the displayed value
A 150 ohm resistor with 5% tolerance should read between 142.5Ω and 157.5Ω. Readings outside this range indicate a damaged or mis-marked component.
In-Circuit Measurement Considerations
Measuring resistors while installed in a circuit can give misleading results:
Scenario
Effect on Reading
Parallel resistors nearby
Lower reading than actual
Capacitors in circuit
Unstable reading
Semiconductor junctions
Lower reading
Circuit powered on
Potentially dangerous and inaccurate
Always power down circuits and discharge capacitors before measuring resistance.
The 4-band 150 ohm resistor color code is Brown-Green-Brown-Gold. Brown represents 1, Green represents 5, the second Brown is a ×10 multiplier, and Gold indicates ±5% tolerance. Multiply 15 by 10 to get 150 ohms. For 5-band precision resistors, the code is Brown-Green-Black-Black-Brown with ±1% tolerance.
Can I use a 150 ohm resistor for any LED?
A 150 ohm resistor works ideally for red, yellow, orange, and older green LEDs with a 5V power supply. These LEDs typically have forward voltages around 2V, resulting in 20mA current flow. For blue, white, and newer green LEDs with higher forward voltages (3-3.4V), a 150 ohm resistor is safe but delivers less current (about 12mA), resulting in reduced brightness. Consider 68-100 ohms for brighter blue and white LEDs at 5V.
What is the SMD code for a 150 ohm resistor?
In the 3-digit SMD marking system, a 150 ohm resistor is marked 151 (15 with one zero added). Don’t confuse this with code 150, which actually means 15 ohms. For 4-digit precision resistors, the marking is 1500. The EIA-96 code used on some 1% resistors is 02B.
Can I substitute a 220 ohm resistor for a 150 ohm?
Yes, you can substitute a 220Ω for a 150 ohm resistor in LED circuits. The LED will be dimmer (about 13.6mA instead of 20mA at 5V) but will still illuminate clearly and actually have a longer lifespan due to reduced current stress. Going in the opposite direction, substituting 100Ω for 150Ω increases current to 30mA, which may exceed the LED’s rating and shorten its life or cause immediate damage.
What wattage 150 ohm resistor do I need for LED circuits?
For standard 5V LED circuits, a 1/4W (0.25W) 150 ohm resistor is more than adequate. The power dissipation is only about 60mW. If you’re driving LEDs from higher voltages like 9V or 12V (which isn’t recommended with 150Ω), you would need 1/2W or 1W resistors to handle the increased heat. Always calculate power dissipation as P = I² × R and choose a resistor rated for at least twice the calculated value for reliable operation.
Summary
The 150 ohm resistor earns its place as a staple component through pure practicality. The math aligns perfectly for 5V LED circuits at 20mA, making it the automatic choice for indicator lights in countless Arduino projects, embedded systems, and prototype circuits.
With its distinctive Brown-Green-Brown-Gold color code for 4-band versions and SMD marking of 151, identifying this resistor becomes second nature after a few projects. Keep a supply of these resistors in your parts collection. Whether you’re building a simple LED blinker or designing production hardware, the 150 ohm resistor will likely find its way into your circuit.
For 3.3V systems, you’ll want lower values. For 9V and 12V applications, step up to 330Ω or 470Ω. But for the ubiquitous 5V supply voltage that dominates hobbyist and professional electronics alike, 150Ω remains the gold standard for LED current limiting.
Inquire: Call 0086-755-23203480, or reach out via the form below/your sales contact to discuss our design, manufacturing, and assembly capabilities.
Quote: Email your PCB files to Sales@pcbsync.com (Preferred for large files) or submit online. We will contact you promptly. Please ensure your email is correct.
Notes: For PCB fabrication, we require PCB design file in Gerber RS-274X format (most preferred), *.PCB/DDB (Protel, inform your program version) format or *.BRD (Eagle) format. For PCB assembly, we require PCB design file in above mentioned format, drilling file and BOM. Click to download BOM template To avoid file missing, please include all files into one folder and compress it into .zip or .rar format.