ElectraCalcIQ

Engineering-caliber calculations
Start Your Trial

Create your ElectraCalcIQ account

Start a 14-day free trial or pay now. Pricing is $20/seat monthly or $200/seat yearly.

What You Get

Included in trial and paid plans

  • Organization workspace with role-based membership
  • Current calculator set with deterministic outputs
  • Saved calculation records and export workflows

This platform supports engineering workflows and does not replace licensed engineering judgment. Read disclaimer.

Billing Summary
Trial 14 days
Monthly $20
Annual $200
Before You Continue

Card details are collected at checkout so your account can continue without interruption if you keep the subscription after the trial. You can cancel later if ElectraCalcIQ is not the right fit for your team.

  • Choose trial or immediate billing during signup
  • Set the number of seats your organization needs today
  • Adjust seats later from Billing as your team changes

Account and billing setup

Leave blank for a personal workspace.
Seats control concurrent user access for your organization.
Trial: full access for 14 days, then your card is charged unless you cancel first. Pay now: billing starts immediately.
Why Teams Sign Up

Shared engineering workflow instead of spreadsheet drift

  • Move beyond disconnected spreadsheets into a shared organization workspace
  • Support repeatable workflows for voltage drop, power, load, fault current, and related project calculations
  • Keep saved records and export-ready outputs in one place for review and delivery
Need a Lower-Friction Next Step?

Review the product before checkout

If you want a guided walkthrough before checkout, request a demo or try the public Ohm's Law demo first.

Signup FAQ

Can I cancel later?
Yes. You can cancel if the platform is not the right fit for your team.

Do I have to invite my whole team immediately?
No. Start with the seats you need now and expand later.

What if I want a walkthrough before buying?
Use Request a demo for a guided conversation or try the public Ohm's Law demo first.