Inverted-F Antenna Design For a PCB

Zachariah Peterson
|  已创建:February 24, 2023  |  已更新:February 18, 2026
Inverted-F Antenna

Printed antennas are a very popular option for RF PCBs as they maintain the low profile of a planar device. If you look at some Bluetooth/WiFi capable MCUs, you will likely see an inverted-F antenna along the board edge to provide Rx and Tx in a compact form factor. In this article, I’ll show how to design one of these antennas, including some design equations, and where to place these antennas for maximum radiation efficiency without interference into other circuits.

Key Takeaways

  • Inverted‑F antennas (IFA and MIFA) are compact quarter‑wave printed antennas that provide near‑omnidirectional radiation and are commonly used in Bluetooth/Wi‑Fi RF PCBs due to their low profile and ease of integration.

  • Proper PCB placement is critical: the antenna must sit at the board edge with no ground or copper beneath it, ensuring efficient radiation and avoiding performance loss from ground‑plane coupling.

  • Designing an IFA has no simple closed‑form equation, but the antenna can be modeled using transmission‑line theory, with input impedance determined by its quarter‑wavelength leg and matched using a standard LC network.

  • IFAs can be implemented either as copper pours or as a PCB component, but creating them as a footprint (with pours inside the footprint) improves reusability and placement control. Just ensure it’s defined as a Net Tie to avoid DRC issues.

Inverted-F Antenna Overview

The typical implementation of an inverted-F antenna is shown in the image below. This type of antenna is a quarter-wavelength antenna where the operational parameters (bandwidth, impedance, etc.) are set by adjusting the geometry along the quarter-wavelength leg of the antenna. An overview of a typical inverted-F antenna is shown below.

inverted F antenna

The GND plane on L2 should run right to the edge of the GND on L1, and no copper pour should be below the antenna. This allows the antenna to radiate nearly omnidirectionally around the longer leg of the antenna where the current is non-zero. Although the radiation is omnidirectional and provided by fringing fields, this reduces the gain one would expect from this type of antenna. Thanks to their near omnidirectionality, these antennas were formerly the most popular for use as single-band or dual-band antennas in older mobile handsets.

A variation on this is the meandered inverted-F antenna, or MIFA. This antenna is most commonly seen in the ESP8266 module, which uses the well-known ESP32 MCU. The meandered antenna is on the top layer and it includes a long zig-zagging segment making up the quarter-wave section of the antenna.

ESP8266 PCB meandered inverted F antenna

Both of these antennas can be compared to patch antennas, and the inverted-F antenna (or its variants) offer several advantages over a basic patch antenna:

  • Inverted-F antennas are smaller than patch antennas operating at the same wavelength
  • Inverted-F antennas can be probe-fed or direct fed as long as a matching network is present
  • Inverted-F antennas can be made multiband by applying more branches
  • Inverted-F antenna bandwidths are comparable, but bandwidths can be more easily tuned with passives

The main disadvantage is the lower gain compared to a patch antenna because patch antennas emit into the half plane above the ground region. The other disadvantage is that you cannot form inverted-F antennas into groups as you would with a patch antenna array. Therefore, for more advanced antenna systems, patch antennas have dominated.

Inverted-F Antenna Design Equations

Unfortunately, there are no design equations for an inverted-F antenna due to its typically complex structure. However, because it is constructed from transmission lines, we can take a circuit-based approach to calculating the input impedance for a given microstrip width.

First, the designer has the freedom to select the microstrip impedance to be used in the inverted-F antenna design. There is no strict requirement for a particular width of microstrip, but it should be noted that the impedance could be very large, even surpassing propagating wave impedance values in vacuum or dielectrics.

Although the characteristic impedance of the trace sections is difficult to determine, the propagation constant and total antenna length are easy to determine based on the quarter wavelength target and the target frequency:

inverted F antenna

Once the propagation constant is known, the input impedance into the antenna can be calculated with a circuit model as long as the trace impedance is known. The circuit model below shows the two branches in the standard inverted-F antenna arrangement, where one leg is shorted (Z1 = 0 Ohms) and the other leg is open (Z2 = infinity).

inverted F antenna circuit model

If you set these two legs in parallel and use the standard input impedance equation for each leg, you will find the following result for the antenna’s input impedance:

inverted-F input impedance

Once the input impedance is known, it can then be matched to the antenna feedline with an LC impedance matching network.

Component or Copper Fill?

When working in your PCB layout software, should you create your inverted-F antenna as a component or as copper fill regions? There are good reasons to do both, and you will get the same result in either case. Personally, I prefer to use a component to create an inverted-F antenna, but this has to be done to match a specific outer layer thickness and Dk value.

To create an inverted-F antenna as a component, place each of the copper elements in the antenna as pour in the component footprint. Once the antenna is placed into the PCB layout, it will be easier to move and rotate the antenna. Make sure to define the component as a Net Tie to prevent any short circuit errors and to avoid questions from your fabricator. The downside of this is that, if there are any updates needed to the antenna, these need to be made to the footprint, and then the footprint needs to be updated in the PCB layout.

inverted F antenna Altium
Inverted-F antenna as a component footprint created with copper fills. Pads are assigned at the two legs of the antenna.

To complete this component, place a single pad as an input at feedline entry on the antenna that matches the pin on the schematic symbol. Then wire the component up in a schematic just like you would other components. Once the components are updated into the PCB, the inverted-F antenna footprint will appear, and it can be placed and routed just like other components.

Whenever you need to draw and place an inverted-F antenna in your PCB layout, use the 2D and 3D CAD tools in Altium Develop. Altium Develop unites every discipline into one collaborative force. Free from silos. Free from limits. It’s where engineers, designers, and innovators work as one to co-create without constraints. Experience Altium Develop today!

关于作者

关于作者

Zachariah Peterson拥有学术界和工业界广泛的技术背景。在从事PCB行业之前,他曾在波特兰州立大学任教。他的物理学硕士研究课题是化学吸附气体传感器,而应用物理学博士研究课题是随机激光理论和稳定性。他的科研背景涵盖纳米粒子激光器、电子和光电半导体器件、环境系统以及财务分析等领域。他的研究成果已发表在若干经同行评审的期刊和会议论文集上,他还为多家公司撰写过数百篇有关PCB设计的技术博客。Zachariah与PCB行业的其他公司合作提供设计和研究服务。他是IEEE光子学会和美国物理学会的成员。

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