Edge Plating
What Is Edge Plating?
Edge plating (also called edge metallization or plated board edges) is a PCB fabrication process that deposits a copper layer onto one or more edges of the circuit board. The plated edge creates an electrically conductive surface that connects copper layers on the top and bottom of the board (and potentially internal layers) through the board edge rather than through vias. Edge plating is used for electromagnetic shielding, providing a continuous ground connection around the board perimeter, and for creating castellated module edges that allow PCBs to be soldered onto carrier boards as surface-mount components.
The manufacturing process for edge plating involves routing the board outline, plating the exposed board edges with copper, and then applying the appropriate surface finish. Edge plating adds manufacturing complexity and cost because the plating process must achieve adequate adhesion to the exposed laminate material at the board edge, which is more challenging than plating the smooth copper surfaces within the board. Design specifications for edge plating must define the minimum copper thickness on the edge, the extent of edge coverage, and the connection pattern to internal layers.
Shielding and Grounding With Edge Plating
Edge plating is increasingly used in designs with strict EMC requirements, where a continuous conductive perimeter provides superior electromagnetic shielding compared to discrete ground vias along the board edge. AI-powered layout tools that incorporate EMC-aware design strategies can evaluate whether edge plating or via-based perimeter grounding best serves the design's shielding requirements, and ensure that the layout provides the necessary copper connections to the board edge for effective plated-edge grounding. This integrated approach to shielding strategy produces designs that meet EMC targets while minimizing the additional manufacturing cost of edge plating features.






