- May 6, 2026
Essential O-Level Physics Formulas Every Student Must Memorise
Ask any secondary school student what makes O-Level Physics challenging, and the answer is almost always the same: the formulas. With dozens of equations spread across topics like mechanics, electricity, waves, and thermal physics, it can feel overwhelming trying to figure out which ones to prioritise and how to actually remember them under exam pressure.
The good news is that O-Level Physics formulas follow logical patterns. Once you understand what each formula represents and how it connects to the physical world, memorisation becomes far less daunting. This guide brings together all the essential O-Level Physics formulas you need to know, organised by topic, along with practical tips to help you retain them for the long term. Whether you are studying independently or attending secondary tuition, having a solid formula reference is one of the most valuable tools in your revision toolkit.
Why Mastering Formulas Is Non-Negotiable for O-Level Physics
Physics is, at its core, a subject built on mathematical relationships between physical quantities. Every formula you encounter is a compact description of how the natural world behaves. For the Singapore-Cambridge O-Level Physics examination, a significant portion of structured and multiple-choice questions requires students to apply these equations correctly, and marks are often awarded for the correct formula, correct substitution, and correct answer — meaning that not knowing a formula can cost you marks at multiple stages in a single question.
Beyond exam performance, understanding formulas deeply builds a strong foundation for A-Level Physics and any science or engineering pathway. Students who treat formulas as isolated facts to memorise tend to struggle when questions are framed in unfamiliar contexts. Those who understand the derivation and meaning of each equation can adapt and apply them flexibly. The sections below are organised to help you do exactly that.
Kinematics and Dynamics Formulas
Kinematics covers the description of motion, while dynamics explains the causes of motion through forces. These two topics form the backbone of the Mechanics section and are among the most heavily tested areas in O-Level Physics.
Key Kinematics Equations
- Speed: v = d / t (speed equals distance divided by time)
- Acceleration: a = (v − u) / t (change in velocity divided by time taken)
- Average Speed: Average speed = Total distance / Total time
For uniformly accelerated motion, students are expected to apply the following equations of motion (also known as the SUVAT equations at higher levels):
- v = u + at
- s = ½(u + v)t
- s = ut + ½at²
- v² = u² + 2as
Here, s is displacement, u is initial velocity, v is final velocity, a is acceleration, and t is time. These four equations are interrelated, so learning how they are derived from each other rather than memorising them independently will save you considerable effort.
Dynamics Formulas
- Newton’s Second Law: F = ma (net force equals mass multiplied by acceleration)
- Weight: W = mg (weight equals mass multiplied by gravitational field strength)
- Momentum: p = mv (momentum equals mass multiplied by velocity)
- Impulse: Ft = mv − mu (force multiplied by time equals change in momentum)
- Density: ρ = m / V (density equals mass divided by volume)
- Pressure: P = F / A (pressure equals force divided by area)
- Pressure in a fluid: P = ρgh (pressure equals density multiplied by gravitational field strength multiplied by height)
Forces, Work, Energy and Power
Energy and its transformations are central to almost every physics topic. The formulas below are not only essential for their own topic cluster but also appear frequently in cross-topic questions involving electricity, thermal physics, and mechanics.
- Work Done: W = Fd (work equals force multiplied by displacement in the direction of the force)
- Gravitational Potential Energy: GPE = mgh
- Kinetic Energy: KE = ½mv²
- Power: P = W / t (power equals work done divided by time)
- Power (alternative): P = Fv (power equals force multiplied by velocity)
- Efficiency: Efficiency = (Useful energy output / Total energy input) × 100%
A common mistake students make is confusing work done with power. Remember: work is about the total energy transferred, while power is about how quickly that transfer happens. Keeping this conceptual distinction clear will help you choose the right formula during exams.
Thermal Physics Formulas
Thermal physics deals with heat, temperature, and the internal energy of substances. Two formulas in this topic are particularly important for O-Level students.
- Heat Capacity (specific heat capacity): Q = mcΔT (thermal energy equals mass multiplied by specific heat capacity multiplied by change in temperature)
- Latent Heat: Q = mL (thermal energy equals mass multiplied by specific latent heat)
Understanding the difference between these two is critical. The specific heat capacity formula applies when the temperature of a substance is changing, while the latent heat formula applies during a change of state (melting or boiling), where temperature stays constant. Exam questions frequently test whether students can identify which scenario applies, so being clear on the physical meaning of each formula is just as important as knowing the equation itself.
Waves and Optics
The Waves topic introduces students to the behaviour of light and sound, and the formulas here are relatively compact but easy to confuse with one another if not understood properly.
Wave Properties
- Wave Speed: v = fλ (wave speed equals frequency multiplied by wavelength)
- Period and Frequency: T = 1 / f (period is the reciprocal of frequency)
Optics
- Snell’s Law (refraction): n₁ sin θ₁ = n₂ sin θ₂
- Refractive Index: n = sin i / sin r (or n = c / v, where c is the speed of light in a vacuum and v is the speed of light in the medium)
- Critical Angle: sin c = 1 / n
- Thin Lens Formula: 1/f = 1/u + 1/v (focal length, object distance, image distance)
- Magnification: m = v / u (image distance divided by object distance)
Refraction-related formulas tend to appear in structured questions requiring diagram work as well as calculation. Practising these alongside ray diagrams will reinforce both your conceptual understanding and your formula application skills.
Electricity and Magnetism
Electricity is one of the most formula-dense topics in O-Level Physics and is also one of the highest-weighted sections in the examination. Students who invest time in understanding these relationships — rather than rote memorising them — consistently perform better on circuit analysis questions.
Fundamental Electrical Quantities
- Current: I = Q / t (current equals charge divided by time)
- Ohm’s Law: V = IR (voltage equals current multiplied by resistance)
- Resistance in Series: R_total = R₁ + R₂ + R₃ + …
- Resistance in Parallel: 1/R_total = 1/R₁ + 1/R₂ + 1/R₃ + …
Power and Energy in Circuits
- Electrical Power: P = IV
- Electrical Power (alternative forms): P = I²R and P = V² / R
- Electrical Energy: E = Pt = IVt
- Cost of Electricity: Cost = Power (in kW) × Time (in hours) × Rate per kWh
Transformers
- Transformer Equation: Vₚ / Vₛ = Nₚ / Nₛ (primary voltage over secondary voltage equals primary turns over secondary turns)
- Ideal Transformer Power Conservation: VₚIₚ = VₛIₛ
A tip many students find useful: learn the three power formulas (P = IV, P = I²R, P = V²/R) as a group. They are all derived from Ohm’s Law and can be obtained from one another through substitution. Understanding this relationship means you only need to deeply understand one formula to recall all three.
Proven Tips to Memorise Physics Formulas Effectively
Knowing which formulas to learn is only half the battle. The other half is making sure they stick when you sit down in the exam hall. Here are strategies that work particularly well for O-Level Physics students.
Understand before you memorise. Every formula tells a story about how physical quantities relate to each other. Before trying to commit an equation to memory, ask yourself: what does each variable represent? What happens to the outcome if one variable increases or decreases? This conceptual grounding makes the formula far easier to recall and apply correctly.
Group formulas by theme. Rather than working through a random list, organise your revision by topic cluster, as this guide does. When you learn P = IV alongside V = IR and E = IVt, the relationships between them become obvious, and you effectively learn three formulas with the mental effort of one.
Use formula cards with worked examples. Write each formula on one side of a card and a short worked example on the other. Testing yourself regularly using these cards, a technique called active recall, is one of the most evidence-backed study methods available. Passive re-reading of notes is far less effective.
Apply formulas in timed practice. The pressure of a timed practice paper forces you to retrieve formulas quickly and confidently. Students who only revise formulas in a relaxed setting sometimes find they cannot access them under exam conditions. Regular timed drills close this gap effectively.
Get structured guidance early. If you find yourself consistently losing marks on formula application questions, it is worth seeking structured support before the patterns become entrenched. EduFirst’s secondary tuition programmes are designed around small class sizes of just 4 to 8 students, which means tutors can identify and address each student’s specific formula gaps directly, rather than delivering generic lessons to a large group.
Final Thoughts
O-Level Physics formulas can look intimidating when viewed as a long list, but approached systematically and topic by topic, they become very manageable. The key is to understand the physical meaning behind each equation, practise applying them across a range of question types, and revisit them regularly enough that retrieval becomes automatic. Use this guide as a living reference throughout your revision, and return to it as new topics are introduced in class.
For students who want to build these skills with expert guidance, EduFirst Learning Centre offers personalised secondary tuition that covers Physics alongside other core subjects. With 25 locations across Singapore and class sizes kept deliberately small, students receive the kind of targeted attention that makes a measurable difference to their results. If you are preparing for your O-Level examinations and want to strengthen your Physics foundation, the right support can make all the difference.
Ready to Strengthen Your Physics Foundation?
EduFirst Learning Centre’s experienced tutors work with Secondary students in small groups of 4–8, ensuring every student gets the individual attention they need to master O-Level Physics and beyond. With 25 centres islandwide and flexible e-lesson options, quality tuition fits around your schedule.