USB Routing

What Is USB Routing on a PCB?

USB routing refers to the PCB layout techniques for implementing Universal Serial Bus interfaces, the most ubiquitous connectivity standard in electronics. USB has evolved through multiple generations — USB 2.0 (480 Mbps), USB 3.x (5-20 Gbps), and USB4 (up to 80 Gbps) — with each generation increasing the demands on PCB layout quality. Modern USB implementations often carry multiple protocol tunnels simultaneously (including DisplayPort alt mode and power delivery), making the connector and trace routing more complex than any previous USB generation.

USB 2.0 routing requires 90Ω differential impedance with relatively relaxed length matching. USB 3.x and USB4 add high-speed SuperSpeed lanes that demand tighter impedance control, more precise differential pair matching, and careful attention to via transitions and reference plane continuity. The Type-C connector's reversible orientation adds routing complexity, as the PCB must accommodate signal routing for both connector orientations — either through a multiplexer IC or dual routing paths. Power delivery traces must handle the higher current levels specified in USB PD (up to 5A at 20V or higher), requiring wider traces and adequate copper weight.

USB Layout Optimization With AI

USB interface routing combines differential pair management, power delivery requirements, and connector-specific constraints into a multi-faceted layout challenge. Physics-driven AI layout tools can manage these overlapping requirements simultaneously, ensuring that high-speed differential pairs meet impedance and matching targets while power delivery traces satisfy current-carrying requirements and connector routing accommodates reversibility constraints. This integrated optimization produces USB implementations that meet specification requirements across all aspects of the interface without the manual trade-off negotiations that multi-constraint routing typically involves.

Other glossary terms

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
There are no available glossary items matching the current filters.
Reset