IPC-2221 / IPC-2152 Compliant
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Industrial Interface

RS-485 PCB Routing Calculator

Differential Pair | Termination | Isolation Layout

Use this page to choose a defensible starting point for RS-485 PCB routing: pair geometry, termination placement, stackup checks, and the practical conditions that justify controlled impedance on industrial and building-automation boards.

Quick Answer

For most 1 oz FR4 RS-485 boards, start with a symmetric A/B pair around 6 to 10 mil, route it over a continuous reference plane, keep branch stubs short, and move to an explicit 100 to 120 ohm differential target when data rate, connector transitions, or board length make signal integrity less forgiving.

Key Takeaways

  • RS-485 reliability is usually limited by stubs, grounding, isolation layout, and termination placement before raw trace width becomes the bottleneck.
  • Short low-speed board routes often work with a clean paired layout on FR4, while faster industrial links and cable transitions benefit from checking a 120 ohm-class differential target.
  • Termination, common-mode control, and TVS placement should be solved as one channel design problem, not as separate schematic-only decisions.
  • If the pair crosses an isolation barrier or connector, verify the full path with the impedance and differential impedance calculators before release.

RS-485 Routing Decision Matrix

Use PatternTypical Baud RatePrimary GoalGeometry StartRecommendation
Short on-board node9.6 kbps to 500 kbpsSymmetry and short stubs first6 to 10 mil pair on 1 oz copperControlled impedance is usually optional if the route stays compact.
PLC or industrial controller500 kbps to 2 MbpsClean pair through connector and protection6 to 8 mil with consistent spacingAim for repeatable geometry and check whether 100 to 120 ohm differential routing is practical.
Isolated transceiver designUp to 2.5 MbpsKeep isolation path and return current predictableTight pair plus short local transition sectionsLayout around the isolator, DC-DC, and choke matters more than one nominal width.
Fast or long board path5 to 10 MbpsTreat the board as part of a 120 ohm channelFab-approved diff pair geometryUse explicit impedance calculation and avoid ad hoc neck-downs or long test stubs.

Practical Workflow For RS-485 PCB Design

StepActionWhy It MattersInternal Tool
1. Size copper for power and bias netsUse the trace width calculator for transceiver supply, bias networks, and any shared field-power traces.The A/B pair is low current, but industrial interface boards often fail reviews on auxiliary copper rather than the data pair itself.Trace Width Calculator
2. Confirm laminate and dielectric heightLock the real stackup, copper weight, and reference plane distance with your fabricator.FR4 spread and prepreg changes move differential impedance more than a small width adjustment.FR4 Trace Calculator
3. Check pair impedance when neededModel the A/B pair if the board path is long, fast, isolated, or leaves the PCB through a controlled cable system.This is the point where “clean enough” routing turns into a real channel-design problem.Differential Impedance Calculator
4. Validate the full industrial interfaceReview termination, ESD, common-mode choke, connector, and isolation placement together.Field failures usually come from discontinuities, surge layout, or ground reference mistakes rather than the first width estimate.Automotive PCB Calculator

RS-485 vs CAN Bus Layout Priorities

Design FactorRS-485CAN BusWhy It Matters
Nominal channel impedanceTypically aligned to 120 ohm cable systemsAlso commonly aligned to 120 ohm cable systemsRS-485 often appears in noisier multi-drop industrial nodes with isolation and surge protection that dominate layout decisions.
Topology sensitivityMulti-drop stubs can quickly degrade marginsStubs also matter, especially for CAN FDRS-485 boards frequently need stronger discipline around terminal blocks, removable nodes, and jumperable termination.
Termination approachDepends on node role, cable length, and failsafe schemeUsually fixed around end-node termination rulesRS-485 layouts benefit from clear assembly options for end-of-line versus mid-bus nodes.
Protection layout pressureHigh in industrial environments with EFT, surge, and isolationHigh in automotive EMC environmentsRS-485 pages should treat connector, TVS, isolator, and ground strategy as first-order routing choices.

Fieldbus Layout Checklist

  • +Route A and B as a pair over one uninterrupted reference plane.
  • +Keep drops to test pads, terminal blocks, and multi-drop nodes as short as the product allows.
  • +Place TVS, common-mode choke, termination, and connector in a compact chain near the cable entry.
  • +Keep any bias or failsafe network physically close to the transceiver so the bus pair does not wander through the board.
  • +If one trace changes layer, the other trace should transition with it and stay coupled through the via region.
  • +Document whether the fab should hold a differential target or only standard geometry tolerance.

When To Escalate Beyond Rule-Of-Thumb Routing

Move beyond default 6 to 10 mil routing when the pair is long relative to board size, the design crosses isolation, the connector launches into a 120 ohm cable, or the interface operates near the upper end of practical RS-485 speed. That is when the impedance calculatorand differential pair toolsstop being optional.

If the board sits in a noisy cabinet or motor-control enclosure, also review surge spacing, connector grounding, and system robustness with the robotics control PCB guideor the clearance and creepage calculator.

Build A More Defensible RS-485 Rule Set

Start with manufacturable geometry, verify the real stackup, then tighten the channel only when the product actually needs it. That keeps industrial boards robust without inventing precision that the fab stackup and deployment environment cannot support.

RS-485 PCB Routing FAQ

Does RS-485 always require 120 ohm controlled impedance on the PCB?

No. Many short low-speed board routes work with a clean paired layout and sensible spacing on FR4. You should explicitly target a 100 to 120 ohm class differential geometry when the board path is longer, the baud rate is higher, or the PCB transition meaningfully interacts with a 120 ohm cable system.

What trace width is a reasonable starting point for RS-485 on FR4?

A practical starting point is 6 to 10 mil on 1 oz copper, then refine the width and spacing using your actual stackup. Width alone does not define the pair because dielectric height and spacing set the differential behavior.

What usually breaks RS-485 first: impedance error or long stubs?

Long stubs, poor grounding, and bad protection placement are usually the first failures. An approximate pair geometry is often survivable, but a layout with long branch drops or noisy return paths is much harder to rescue.

Should I route RS-485 as a differential pair in the PCB tool?

Yes. Even though RS-485 is tolerant compared with very high-speed buses, pair rules help maintain symmetry, stable spacing, and coordinated layer transitions. That becomes more important when the design includes isolation, a connector, or multi-megabit data rates.

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