This hands-on, beginner-to-advanced course is designed for students, electronics hobbyists, and engineers who want to learn how to simulate real-world circuits using LTspice.
Instead of just theory, you’ll build, test, and analyze circuits inside LTspice, an industry-standard simulation tool used across academia and industry.
By the end of this course, you’ll be able to simulate analog, digital, and power electronic circuits confidently, visualize results, perform measurements, and troubleshoot designs before ever touching a breadboard.
Whether you’re learning electronics, preparing for lab work, or building circuits professionally, this course will make LTspice an essential part of your design workflow.
Engineering students learning circuit theory, electronics, or power systems
Hobbyists and makers wanting to test designs virtually
Professionals seeking a reliable simulation tool for rapid prototyping
Educators and researchers looking to simulate circuits for demonstrations
LTspice installation, setup, and interface walkthrough
Building basic analog circuits and running simulations
Using simulation types: transient, DC, AC, parametric, and more
Working with resistors, capacitors, inductors, diodes, BJTs, op-amps
Performing waveform analysis: voltage, current, power, FFT, phase
Importing and customizing SPICE models
Designing filters, amplifiers, rectifiers, and converters
Simulating digital logic gates and counters
Analyzing power converters and PWM inverters
Using .step
, .param
, .model
, and other advanced commands
Exporting data for documentation or MATLAB integration
100% hands-on circuit simulation
No hardware needed
Step-by-step interactive lessons
Real industry examples, not just theory
Works on Windows, Mac (native), and Linux (via Wine)
Lifetime access and free updates
A computer with internet access
Basic understanding of electrical circuits (resistors, voltage, current)
No prior experience with LTspice is required
Self-paced lessons
Built-in quizzes and exercises
Direct LTspice file examples
Guided projects in analog, digital, and power electronics