Multimeters & Clamp Meters

277 products

For electricians, technicians and maintenance crews, a dependable meter is usually the first tool out of the bag. Our multimeters and clamp meters deliver trustworthy readings for fault finding, installation testing and everyday diagnostics, on the bench or out in the field. 
 
Each type has its strengths. A digital multimeter is the all-rounder for detailed electrical work because it measures voltage, current, resistance, continuity and more. A clamp meter reads current without breaking the circuit, so you can check load on a live cable quickly and safely. 
 
Between them, these instruments cover residential, commercial and industrial jobs. We stock well-regarded brands including Fluke and Major Tech, with true RMS models for accurate readings on modern non-linear loads and the CAT safety ratings you need when working around higher energy. 
 
Safe, accurate testing depends on a meter you can trust, and accuracy fades if an instrument goes unchecked. That is why we calibrate the meters we sell, backed by ISO 9001 certified processes and traceable results that satisfy compliance and audit requirements. 
 
Orders reach electricians and industrial sites across Australia. If you want help choosing between a multimeter, a clamp meter or a kit with both, our team is ready to guide you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Amultimetermeasures voltage, resistance,continuityand modest current through its probes, which suits detailed diagnostics. A clamp meter reads current by clamping around a conductor, with no need to break the circuit. Many electricians carryboth, sinceeach handles jobs the other does not.

A typical digitalmultimeterreads AC and DC voltage, current,resistanceand continuity, and many add capacitance, frequency,temperatureand diode testing. That flexibility makes it the standard toolfor tracing faults, checking components and verifying installations across domestic,commercialand industrial electrical work.

True RMS meters accurately measure distorted or non-linear waveforms, which are common wherever variable speed drives, LED lighting and electronics are present. A cheaper averaging meter can read those signals incorrectly. If you work on modern installations, a true RMS instrument is well worth the investment.

Used correctly, yes. Clamping around a single conductor lets you measure current without exposed contact, which is one of the tool's key safety benefits. Always check the meter's CAT rating suits the environment, inspect the leads and follow safe working procedures for the voltage involved.

They do.Regular use,drops and ageing components gradually shift a meter's accuracy, and a reading you cannot trust is worse than no reading at all. Calibration confirms the instrument still performs to specification. We calibrate the test gear we supply and provide traceable results.

The right category depends on where you test. CAT III suits fixed installations and distribution boards, while CAT IV covers the supply side and origin of an installation. Higher categories offer greater protection against transient surges, so match the rating to the highest energy you will meet.

Yes. We keep a broad range ofmultimetersand clamp meters in stock and ship to electricians,contractorsand industrial sites nationwide. Let us know your typical applications andrequiredfunctions, and we will point you to a meter or test kit that fits the way you work.