Comparison

Best Free Online Scientific Calculators (and What "Truly Scientific" Means)

There's no single "best" — there's the best for your task. Here's how the leading free tools differ, and the capability line that separates a real scientific calculator from a dressed-up four-function one.

fx-991ES Web TeamUpdated 23 June 20268 min read

Search for a free online scientific calculator and you'll find everything from a single row of trig keys to full computer-algebra systems. They are not interchangeable. This guide defines what "truly scientific" means, then matches the best free options to the jobs they're actually good at.

On this page

  1. What "truly scientific" means
  2. What to look for
  3. Best tool by job
  4. Feature comparison
  5. FAQ

What "truly scientific" means

The word "scientific" is doing a lot of unspoken work. There are really three tiers:

  1. Four-function — add, subtract, multiply, divide.
  2. "Scientific" (basic) — adds trigonometry, logarithms, powers and roots. This is where most online "scientific calculators" stop.
  3. Truly scientific — also does numerical integration and differentiation, matrices and vectors, complex numbers, statistics with regression, equation solving, and base-N arithmetic.

If a tool only reaches tier 2, it's a basic scientific calculator with extra buttons — not a full one.

What to look for

Best tool by job

Best for quick everyday sums — a built-in calculator

The Google search calculator and your operating system's calculator are perfect for fast trig, logs and arithmetic. They're not built for matrices, complex numbers or base-N.

Best for graphing — Desmos / GeoGebra

For plotting functions and exploring graphs visually, Desmos and GeoGebra are outstanding, and both handle regression and more. If you need a picture of a function, start there. (See Desmos vs Google vs a full scientific calculator.)

Best for full-function, exam-style calculation — a Casio fx-991ES PLUS emulator

When you need the tier-3 modes in one keypad-driven interface — the way a physical exam calculator works — a faithful fx-991ES PLUS emulator is the strongest free option. It covers calculus, matrices, complex numbers, statistics, equations and base-N, free and offline. (See browser alternatives to the fx-991ES PLUS.)

Feature comparison

CapabilityBuilt-in / GoogleDesmos / GeoGebrafx-991ES emulator
Trig, logs, powers, rootsYesYesYes
Function graphingLimitedYes (their strength)No
Numerical calculusNoYesYes
Statistics & regressionNoYesYes
Matrices & vectorsNoVariesYes
Complex numbers (a+bi)NoVariesYes
Base-N & bitwiseNoNoYes
Exam-style Casio layoutNoNoYes
Honest take

No tool wins every row. If you need graphs, use a grapher. If you need base-N, bitwise logic, or to practise the exact key sequences of a physical exam calculator, a full scientific emulator is the better fit.

Frequently asked questions

What makes a calculator "truly scientific"?

Beyond trig and logs, it handles calculus, matrices, complex numbers, statistics with regression, equation solving and base-N.

What's the best free online scientific calculator?

Depends on the job — built-in tools for quick sums, Desmos/GeoGebra for graphing, an fx-991ES PLUS emulator for full-function exam-style work.

Are they free?

The major ones are; this fx-991ES emulator is fully free, no sign-up, and works offline as a PWA.

Try a truly full-function one

Calculus, matrices, complex numbers, statistics, equations and base-N — free, in your browser.

Open the scientific calculator →