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Home PCB Manufacturing

PCB Component Placement: Optimal Layout Strategy

PCB Component Placement: Optimal Layout Strategy

April 1, 2026 /Posted by / 0

Component placement is the most critical step in PCB layout — a good placement makes routing easy, thermal management effective, and EMI controllable, while a poor placement creates routing nightmares and performance problems that no amount of trace optimisation can fix. Indian electronics designers often jump straight to routing without spending adequate time on placement. This guide presents a systematic approach to component placement that works for everything from simple Arduino shields to complex multi-layer designs.

Table of Contents

  • Placement Strategy Overview
  • Mechanical Constraints First
  • Power Section Placement
  • Signal Path Placement
  • Decoupling Capacitor Placement
  • Thermal Considerations
  • Assembly-Friendly Placement
  • Frequently Asked Questions

Placement Strategy Overview

Follow this placement order for best results:

  1. Fixed components: Connectors, mounting holes, switches, LEDs — positions dictated by the enclosure and user interface
  2. Critical components: Processors, FPGAs, and their associated memory — central location with shortest connections
  3. Power components: Regulators, inductors, power MOSFETs — near the power input, away from sensitive analog circuits
  4. High-speed components: USB transceivers, Ethernet PHYs, clock generators — near their connectors to minimise trace length
  5. Decoupling capacitors: As close as possible to each IC power pin
  6. Remaining components: Resistors, LEDs, test points — fill in around the critical components
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Mechanical Constraints First

Before placing any component, define the board outline and all mechanical constraints:

  • Board outline: Match the enclosure dimensions with 0.2-0.5mm clearance on all sides
  • Mounting holes: Place first — they cannot move. Ensure adequate keepout (2mm minimum) around each hole for the screw head
  • Connectors: Position USB, power, header, and external connectors at board edges matching the enclosure cutouts
  • Height restrictions: Some enclosure areas have limited component height — mark these as keepout zones
  • Heat zones: If the enclosure has ventilation openings, position heat-generating components near them

In KiCad, import the enclosure outline as a reference on the User.Drawings layer. Many enclosure manufacturers provide STEP files that can be imported for 3D clearance checking.

Power Section Placement

The power section converts the input voltage (USB 5V, battery, mains) to the voltages your circuits need. Place it as a self-contained block:

  • Position the power input connector and the voltage regulator(s) close together
  • Keep the input capacitor within 5mm of the regulator input pin
  • Keep the output capacitor within 5mm of the regulator output pin
  • For switch-mode regulators, the inductor, input cap, output cap, and feedback resistor must form a tight loop with the IC
  • Place the power section away from sensitive analog circuits (ADCs, audio, sensors) — switching regulators generate noise
  • Power ground return path should not cross under sensitive signal areas
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Signal Path Placement

Arrange components to follow the natural signal flow of the circuit. This minimises trace length and layer transitions:

  • Input to output: Place components in the order signals flow through the circuit — from input connector through processing stages to output connector
  • Analog and digital separation: Keep analog circuits (sensors, ADCs, audio) physically separated from digital circuits (MCU, memories, USB). This reduces digital noise coupling into analog signals
  • Clock placement: Place crystal oscillators and clock generators as close as possible to the IC clock pins. Keep clock traces short and away from board edges and connectors
  • Differential pairs: Place the transmitter/receiver IC close to its connector. USB PHY near the USB connector, Ethernet PHY near the RJ45 jack

Decoupling Capacitor Placement

Decoupling capacitors suppress high-frequency power supply noise at each IC. Placement is critical — a capacitor 10mm away from the IC pin provides almost no decoupling benefit above 100 MHz.

Rule Detail
Distance Within 2mm of the IC power pin (measured trace length, not straight-line distance)
Via placement Via to ground plane directly from the capacitor pad, not at the end of a trace
Layer Same layer as the IC if possible. Opposite side placement acceptable if via is directly adjacent
Value cascade 100nF closest to pin, 1µF nearby, 10µF at regulator output
Quantity One 100nF per VCC pin (minimum). Complex ICs may need 10+ decoupling capacitors

For multi-layer boards, place the smallest capacitor (100nF) closest to the IC power pin, with its ground via connecting directly to the ground plane. The current loop from IC pin → capacitor → ground plane → IC ground pin should be as small as possible.

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Thermal Considerations

  • Hot components together: Group voltage regulators, power MOSFETs, and other heat sources in one area of the board so a single heatsink or thermal solution covers them all
  • Temperature-sensitive components away from heat: Keep electrolytic capacitors, precision resistors, and temperature sensors away from hot components. Every 10°C increase halves electrolytic capacitor life
  • Thermal relief on ground pads: For hand soldering, large ground plane connections need thermal relief spokes. For reflow-only assembly, direct connections are preferred for better thermal performance
  • Airflow direction: If the product has a fan, orient tall components with their long axis parallel to airflow
  • Thermal vias: Place an array of thermal vias (0.3mm drill, 1mm pitch) under exposed thermal pads of QFN and DPAK packages

Assembly-Friendly Placement

Consider the assembly process when placing components:

  • Single-side preferred: Place all SMD components on one side if possible. This reduces the assembly from two reflow passes to one
  • Component orientation: Align all polarised components (ICs, diodes, LEDs) in the same direction. This speeds up visual inspection and reduces assembly errors
  • Through-hole components: Place on the opposite side from SMD components for wave soldering compatibility. If mixed assembly, keep THT components grouped in one area
  • Rework access: Leave at least 1mm clearance between adjacent IC packages. A soldering iron needs physical access to each pad for rework
  • Test points: Add test points for critical signals — power rails, communication buses, clock signals. Place them accessible with standard multimeter probes (2mm pads minimum)
  • Fiducial marks: Add at least 3 fiducial marks (1mm circle with 2mm mask opening) for pick-and-place machine alignment
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Frequently Asked Questions

How much time should I spend on placement vs routing?

A good rule of thumb is 60% placement, 40% routing. If you spend adequate time on placement, routing becomes straightforward. Many experienced designers spend 2-3 days on placement for a complex board and only 1-2 days on routing. Rushing placement to start routing is the most common beginner mistake.

Should I place components on both sides?

Use both sides only when necessary — single-side placement reduces assembly cost by 30-50% because the board only needs one reflow pass. If the board is space-constrained, place smaller passive components (resistors, capacitors) on the bottom side and all ICs on the top side.

How close can I place components to the board edge?

Minimum 1mm from the board edge for all components. For panelised boards, keep components 2mm from V-score lines and 3mm from routed tab edges. The depaneling process can stress components near the edge.

How do I handle component placement for a double-sided board with hand soldering?

Place SMD components on the top side and through-hole components on the bottom side. Solder the SMD side first using a hot plate or hot air, flip the board, then solder through-hole components from the bottom side with a soldering iron. This way, gravity holds SMD parts during reflow.

What is the impact of placement on EMI?

Poor placement is the primary cause of EMI problems. Specifically: long clock traces act as antennas, power loops between regulator and capacitor create magnetic field emissions, and digital signals routed near board edges radiate. Good placement keeps high-frequency loops small and contained within the board interior.

Find breadboards, prototyping supplies, and layout tools for your PCB design projects at Zbotic PCB & Prototyping — delivering across India.

Tags: Component Placement, Design Strategy, PCB, PCB layout, PCB manufacturing
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