Simple Op-Amp Circuit: Diagram, Working Principle & Setup Guide

A simple op-amp circuit is one of the best starting points for learning analog electronics. With only an operational amplifier IC, a few resistors, a power supply, and a feedback connection, you can build a useful amplifier, buffer, or signal conditioning stage.

In this guide, we will explain what a simple op-amp circuit is, how non-inverting and inverting op-amp circuits work, how to read the circuit diagram, and how to set up the circuit correctly on a breadboard.

Quick Answer: What Is a Simple Op-Amp Circuit?

A simple op-amp circuit is a basic amplifier or buffer built around an operational amplifier. The circuit normally uses negative feedback so the output voltage becomes predictable and stable. Instead of relying on the op-amp’s very high internal open-loop gain, a simple op-amp circuit uses external resistors to set the practical closed-loop gain.

The three most beginner-friendly op-amp circuits are the voltage follower, the non-inverting amplifier, and the inverting amplifier.

Simple Op-Amp Circuit Best For Output Phase Basic Gain
Voltage follower Buffering a signal Same as input 1
Non-inverting amplifier Beginner gain circuit Same as input 1 + Rf / Rg
Inverting amplifier Signal inversion and gain 180° inverted -Rf / Rin

If you are completely new to op-amps, start with a voltage follower or a non-inverting amplifier. These circuits are easier to wire, easier to understand, and less likely to confuse beginners than open-loop op-amp circuits.

What Is a Simple Op-Amp Circuit?

Simplest Beginner-Friendly Configuration

The simplest beginner-friendly op-amp circuit is usually not an open-loop amplifier. In real projects, an op-amp is most often used with feedback. Feedback connects part or all of the output signal back to the input side of the circuit. This feedback path helps control the gain and keeps the circuit stable.

For a first experiment, the voltage follower is the easiest circuit. In a voltage follower, the output is connected directly to the inverting input, and the signal is applied to the non-inverting input. The circuit does not increase voltage amplitude, but it gives high input impedance and low output impedance, which makes it useful as a buffer.

The next best beginner circuit is the non-inverting amplifier. It keeps the output in phase with the input and uses two resistors to set the gain. This makes it easier to understand than an inverting circuit, where the output polarity is reversed.

Beginner rule: Do not start by using an op-amp without feedback unless you are intentionally building a comparator-style circuit. Without feedback, the op-amp output will usually jump to one of the supply rails.

Why This Is the Best Starting Point

An operational amplifier has extremely high open-loop gain. That means even a very small voltage difference between the two input terminals can drive the output toward the positive or negative supply rail. This is useful in comparator applications, but it is not ideal when you want a clean, predictable amplifier.

Negative feedback changes this behavior. Instead of letting the op-amp amplify uncontrollably, feedback forces the circuit to follow a defined relationship between input and output. In a simple non-inverting amplifier, the output gain is set mainly by the feedback resistor and the resistor to ground. In a simple inverting amplifier, the gain is set by the ratio of the feedback resistor to the input resistor.

This is why beginner op-amp circuits should focus on controlled closed-loop operation first. Once you understand feedback, gain, saturation, and power supply limits, it becomes much easier to understand more advanced op-amp circuits such as filters, oscillators, comparators, precision rectifiers, and instrumentation amplifiers.

Basic Components in a Simple Op-Amp Circuit

A basic op-amp circuit does not require many parts, but each part matters. A wrong power connection, missing ground, or incorrect feedback resistor can make the circuit fail even when the schematic looks simple.

Component Function in the Circuit Beginner Tip
Op-amp IC Amplifies the voltage difference between the two inputs Use LM358 or LM324 for simple low-frequency single-supply experiments
Input resistor Sets input current in an inverting amplifier Common values: 10kΩ to 100kΩ
Feedback resistor Connects output back to input and controls gain Keep the feedback path short on a breadboard
Power supply Provides operating voltage for the op-amp Check whether the IC supports single-supply operation
Input source Provides the signal to be amplified or buffered Use a small signal first, such as 0.1V to 1V
Output load Receives the output signal Do not drive heavy loads directly unless the op-amp supports it

Op-Amp IC

The op-amp IC is the core device in the circuit. Popular beginner options include LM358, LM324, TL081, TL082, and the classic 741. However, not all of them are equally suitable for modern breadboard experiments.

For simple single-supply circuits, LM358 and LM324 are usually more beginner-friendly than the old 741 op-amp. The 741 is useful for learning classic op-amp theory, but it often expects dual supplies and is not ideal for 5V single-supply circuits. If you are building a basic sensor amplifier, buffer, or low-frequency signal stage, an LM358 or LM324 is often easier to use.

For more details about practical op-amp choices, see our guides to the LM324 op-amp pinout and applications and LM358 alternatives and equivalents.

Input Resistor

In a non-inverting amplifier, the input signal is applied directly to the non-inverting input, so there may not be a series input resistor in the simplest version. In an inverting amplifier, however, the input resistor is essential because it controls the input current flowing into the summing node.

For beginner circuits, 10kΩ is a good starting point. It is high enough to avoid wasting current but low enough to avoid many noise and bias current problems that can appear with very large resistor values.

Feedback Resistor

The feedback resistor is one of the most important parts of a simple op-amp circuit. It connects the output back to the inverting input. Together with another resistor, it defines the closed-loop gain.

For example, in a non-inverting amplifier, a 10kΩ feedback resistor and a 10kΩ resistor to ground give a gain of 2. In an inverting amplifier, a 10kΩ input resistor and a 10kΩ feedback resistor give a gain of -1.

Power Supply

An op-amp cannot output a voltage beyond its supply rails. If you power an op-amp from 0V and 5V, the output cannot become +10V, even if the gain formula says it should. Many op-amps also cannot swing all the way to the rails, unless they are rail-to-rail output types.

There are two common power supply arrangements:

  • Single supply: for example, 0V and +5V, or 0V and +12V.
  • Dual supply: for example, -5V and +5V, or -12V and +12V.

Single-supply circuits are convenient for microcontroller and sensor projects, but they need careful input biasing if the signal moves above and below 0V. Dual-supply circuits are easier for AC signals centered around ground.

Input Source and Output Load

The input source can be a sensor, a function generator, a potentiometer voltage divider, or another circuit stage. The output can be measured with a multimeter or oscilloscope, connected to an ADC input, or sent to another analog stage.

Do not assume an op-amp can drive any load. Many general-purpose op-amps are designed for signal-level outputs, not motors, speakers, relays, or LEDs without current-limiting and driver stages.

Simple Non-Inverting Op-Amp Circuit Diagram

Recommended image: simple-non-inverting-op-amp-circuit-diagram.jpg
Alt text: Simple non inverting op amp circuit diagram with gain formula
Placement: Directly below this H2.

Circuit Layout

A simple non-inverting op-amp circuit applies the input signal to the non-inverting input, marked with a plus sign. The output is connected back to the inverting input through a feedback resistor. Another resistor connects the inverting input to ground or to a reference voltage.

This layout is popular because the output signal has the same polarity as the input signal. If the input voltage rises, the output voltage also rises. If the input voltage falls, the output voltage also falls.

Basic non-inverting circuit connections:

  • Input signal goes to the + input.
  • Rf connects from output to the input.
  • Rg connects from the input to ground or reference voltage.
  • Output is taken from the op-amp output pin.

Gain Formula

The voltage gain of a non-inverting op-amp circuit is:

Gain = 1 + Rf / Rg

Where Rf is the feedback resistor and Rg is the resistor from the inverting input to ground or reference voltage.

Rf Rg Voltage Gain Example Output with 1V Input
10kΩ 10kΩ 2 2V
20kΩ 10kΩ 3 3V
47kΩ 10kΩ 5.7 5.7V, only if the supply voltage allows it
Practical note: The formula tells you the ideal gain, not the guaranteed output voltage. If your op-amp is powered from 5V, it cannot produce a 5.7V output. The output will saturate or clip.

How the Signal Changes

In a non-inverting amplifier, the output follows the input polarity. A positive-going input creates a positive-going output. The output is larger than the input according to the gain set by the resistors.

This makes the non-inverting circuit useful for sensor signal amplification, audio preamplifiers, ADC input conditioning, and general-purpose signal scaling. It is also a natural next step after learning the voltage follower.

Simple Inverting Op-Amp Circuit Diagram

Recommended image: simple-inverting-op-amp-circuit-diagram.jpg
Alt text: Simple inverting op amp circuit diagram with feedback resistor and input resistor
Placement: Directly below this H2.

Circuit Layout

A simple inverting op-amp circuit sends the input signal through an input resistor into the inverting input. The non-inverting input is normally connected to ground or to a reference voltage. A feedback resistor connects the output back to the inverting input.

This circuit produces an output that is inverted relative to the input. In other words, a positive input produces a negative-going output, and a negative input produces a positive-going output, assuming the power supply allows that swing.

Basic inverting circuit connections:

  • Input signal passes through Rin to the input.
  • The + input connects to ground or a reference voltage.
  • Rf connects from output back to the input.
  • The output is inverted by 180° compared with the input.

Gain Formula

The voltage gain of an inverting op-amp circuit is:

Gain = -Rf / Rin

The negative sign means the output is inverted.

Rin Rf Voltage Gain Meaning
10kΩ 10kΩ -1 Same amplitude, inverted
10kΩ 20kΩ -2 Twice the amplitude, inverted
10kΩ 100kΩ -10 Ten times the amplitude, easy to saturate

Why the Output Is Inverted

The inverting input is held close to the voltage at the non-inverting input by negative feedback. If the non-inverting input is grounded, the inverting input becomes a “virtual ground” point. It is not directly connected to ground, but the feedback action keeps it close to 0V in normal operation.

When a positive input voltage pushes current through Rin, the output must move negative to pull current back through Rf. This balancing action creates an inverted output.

Single-supply warning: If you use a single 5V supply, a normal inverting amplifier cannot produce a negative output voltage. For AC signals, you usually need a mid-supply reference, such as 2.5V, or a dual supply.

How to Set Up an Op-Amp on a Breadboard

Recommended image: op-amp-breadboard-setup-common-mistakes.jpg
Alt text: Op amp breadboard setup showing power pins feedback resistors and decoupling capacitor
Placement: Under the breadboard setup section.

A schematic shows electrical connections, but a breadboard layout introduces practical problems. Long jumper wires, missing power pins, loose ground connections, and misplaced resistors are common reasons why a simple op-amp circuit does not work.

Power Pin Connections

Before adding input and feedback resistors, connect the power pins correctly. Always check the datasheet or pinout diagram for the exact op-amp package you are using.

  1. Place the op-amp IC across the center gap of the breadboard.
  2. Connect the positive supply pin to +5V, +9V, or +12V, depending on the IC.
  3. Connect the negative supply pin to ground for single-supply operation.
  4. Make sure the signal source ground and breadboard ground are connected together.
  5. Use a multimeter to confirm the IC actually receives power at its pins.

For a first single-supply experiment, an LM358 or LM324 is usually easier than a 741. If you are using a dual-supply lab setup, connect the positive rail to V+, the negative rail to V-, and the midpoint to ground.

Avoiding Common Wiring Mistakes

Most beginner problems are not caused by the formula. They are caused by wiring. Use the following checklist before assuming the op-amp is damaged.

Common Mistake What Happens How to Fix It
Power pins not connected No output or random output Check V+ and V- directly at the IC pins
No common ground Measurements do not make sense Connect signal source ground to circuit ground
Feedback resistor in the wrong row Output saturates Trace the feedback path from output to inverting input
Inputs reversed Circuit may latch or behave opposite to expectation Confirm the + and – input pins from the datasheet
Input signal goes below ground on single supply Output clips or disappears Add biasing or use a dual supply
Using a 741 on 5V single supply Circuit may not work correctly Use LM358, LM324, or a suitable modern op-amp

Decoupling Capacitor Tips

A decoupling capacitor helps stabilize the supply voltage near the op-amp. Without it, the circuit may pick up noise or oscillate, especially on a breadboard with long wires.

For a simple op-amp setup, place a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor as close as possible between the op-amp power pin and ground. If you use a dual supply, place one capacitor from V+ to ground and another from V- to ground. You can also add a larger capacitor, such as 1µF or 10µF, across the supply rails for extra smoothing.

Practical setup tip: Keep the feedback resistor close to the op-amp pins. A long feedback loop can pick up noise and make the circuit unstable.

Common Problems in Simple Op-Amp Circuits

Even a basic op-amp circuit can fail if the supply voltage, input range, resistor values, or layout are wrong. The following problems are especially common in beginner breadboard circuits.

Output Saturation

Output saturation happens when the op-amp tries to produce a voltage beyond what its power supply allows. For example, if your circuit has a gain of 10 and your input is 1V, the ideal output is 10V. But if the op-amp is powered from only 5V, it cannot output 10V.

The result is clipping or saturation. The output may stick near the positive rail, the negative rail, or ground, depending on the circuit and supply arrangement.

Noise and Oscillation

Noise and oscillation often come from layout problems, missing decoupling capacitors, long jumper wires, high resistor values, or using a fast op-amp on a breadboard. A circuit that looks correct on paper can still behave poorly if the physical layout is messy.

To reduce problems, use short feedback connections, place decoupling capacitors close to the IC, avoid unnecessarily high resistor values, and start with a stable general-purpose op-amp.

Wrong Supply Voltage

Every op-amp has a specified supply voltage range. Some work well from a single 5V supply, while others are designed for higher or dual supplies. If the op-amp is not powered correctly, the output may not respond as expected.

Before building the circuit, check the datasheet for these items:

Datasheet Parameter Why It Matters
Supply voltage range Determines whether 5V, 9V, 12V, or dual supply operation is allowed
Input common-mode range Shows what input voltages the op-amp can correctly sense
Output voltage swing Shows how close the output can get to the supply rails
Gain bandwidth product Limits how much gain is available at higher frequencies
Slew rate Affects large or fast-changing signals
Output current Determines what load the op-amp can drive safely

Wrong Resistor Values

Resistor ratios set the gain, but absolute values still matter. Very low resistor values can make the op-amp drive too much current. Very high resistor values can increase noise, offset error, and sensitivity to leakage current on the breadboard.

For most beginner op-amp circuits, feedback and input resistors between 10kΩ and 100kΩ are a practical starting range.

Simple Op-Amp Circuit Example Values

The table below gives practical starting values for simple op-amp experiments. These values are not the only possible choices, but they are easy to build and measure.

Use Case Configuration Suggested Values Notes
First test circuit Voltage follower Output connected directly to – input Gain is 1, best for checking basic operation
Gain of 2 Non-inverting Rf = 10kΩ, Rg = 10kΩ Good first amplifier circuit
Gain of 5 Non-inverting Rf = 40kΩ, Rg = 10kΩ Check output swing carefully
Inverted unity gain Inverting Rin = 10kΩ, Rf = 10kΩ Output has same amplitude but opposite polarity
High inverting gain Inverting Rin = 10kΩ, Rf = 100kΩ Easy to saturate if input is too large
Recommended first build: Start with a voltage follower. Then build a non-inverting amplifier with gain of 2. After that, try an inverting amplifier with gain of -1.

When Should You Use a Simple Op-Amp Circuit?

A simple op-amp circuit is useful whenever you need to buffer, amplify, scale, or condition an analog signal before sending it to another part of a system.

Sensor Interface

Many sensors produce small voltage signals or have high output impedance. A simple op-amp buffer or amplifier can help prepare the signal for a microcontroller ADC or another analog processing stage.

Audio Preamplifier

A non-inverting op-amp amplifier can increase small audio signals before filtering, mixing, or further amplification. For audio circuits, you must pay attention to noise, bandwidth, supply voltage, and signal biasing.

ADC Input Buffer

A voltage follower can isolate a sensor or voltage divider from an ADC input. This helps prevent the ADC sampling circuit from disturbing the original signal source.

Active Filter Stage

Op-amps are widely used in active low-pass, high-pass, and band-pass filters. A simple amplifier stage is often the foundation for understanding these more advanced circuits.

Comparator-Like Threshold Detection

An op-amp can be used in a comparator-like circuit, but for reliable switching applications, a dedicated comparator is usually better. If your goal is threshold detection, also read about op-amp comparator circuits.

You may also want to compare related circuit types such as inverting vs non-inverting op-amp circuits, voltage follower op-amp circuits, and ideal vs practical op-amps.

Simple Op-Amp Circuit Setup Checklist

Before powering your circuit, use this checklist:

Step Check
1. Choose the IC Confirm the op-amp supports your supply voltage and signal range
2. Check the pinout Identify V+, V-, output, + input, and – input pins
3. Connect power Measure voltage directly at the IC pins
4. Add decoupling Place 0.1µF capacitor close to the power pins
5. Build feedback network Confirm Rf and Rin/Rg are connected to the correct nodes
6. Apply a small input Start with a low-amplitude signal to avoid saturation
7. Measure output Compare measured output with expected gain

FAQs About Simple Op-Amp Circuits

What is the simplest op-amp circuit?

The simplest op-amp circuit is usually the voltage follower. It connects the output directly to the inverting input and applies the signal to the non-inverting input. The gain is 1, so it does not amplify voltage, but it works well as a buffer.

Which op-amp circuit should beginners build first?

Beginners should usually build a voltage follower first, then a non-inverting amplifier. These circuits are easier to understand because the output has the same polarity as the input.

What is the gain of a simple non-inverting op-amp circuit?

The gain of a non-inverting op-amp circuit is 1 + Rf / Rg. Rf is the feedback resistor, and Rg is the resistor from the inverting input to ground or reference voltage.

What is the gain of a simple inverting op-amp circuit?

The gain of an inverting op-amp circuit is -Rf / Rin. The negative sign means the output is inverted by 180° relative to the input.

Why does my op-amp output stay at the supply voltage?

The output is probably saturated. Common causes include too much gain, wrong feedback wiring, an input voltage outside the allowed range, no common ground, or using an unsuitable power supply.

Can I use an LM741 for a simple op-amp circuit?

Yes, but the LM741 is not the best choice for modern 5V single-supply experiments. It is a classic teaching op-amp, but LM358 or LM324 is usually easier for beginner breadboard circuits.

Do I need capacitors in a simple op-amp circuit?

Yes. A small decoupling capacitor near the power pins is strongly recommended. A 0.1µF ceramic capacitor is a common starting point, and a larger capacitor can be added across the supply rails if needed.

Why is my op-amp output waveform clipped?

The required output voltage is likely higher than the op-amp can produce from its supply voltage. Reduce the gain, reduce the input amplitude, use a higher supply voltage if allowed, or choose a rail-to-rail op-amp.

Conclusion

A simple op-amp circuit is the foundation for many analog designs. The most useful beginner circuits are the voltage follower, non-inverting amplifier, and inverting amplifier. Each circuit uses feedback to make the op-amp behave predictably, and each one teaches an important concept: buffering, voltage gain, or signal inversion.

For a reliable first build, choose a beginner-friendly op-amp such as LM358 or LM324, connect the power pins carefully, add a decoupling capacitor, use practical resistor values, and start with a small input signal. Once you understand these basics, you can move on to more advanced op-amp circuits such as filters, comparators, summing amplifiers, and precision signal conditioning circuits.

MOZ Official Authors
MOZ Official Authors

MOZ Official Authors is a collective of engineers, product specialists, and industry professionals from MOZ Electronics. With deep expertise in electronic components, semiconductor sourcing, and supply chain solutions, the team shares practical insights, technical knowledge, and market perspectives for engineers, OEMs, and procurement professionals worldwide. Their articles focus on component selection, industry trends, application guidance, and sourcing strategies, helping customers make informed decisions and accelerate product development.

MOZ Electronics
Logo
Shopping cart