Amps to Watts Calculator

Convert amps to watts for DC, single-phase AC, and three-phase AC circuits. Get kilowatts, BTU/hr, wire gauge, breaker size, and monthly running cost.

A
Watts
Kilowatts
BTU/hr
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
A
V
Power (W)
Kilowatts
BTU/hr
Apparent Power (VA)
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail
A
V
hrs

Power

Real Power (W)
Apparent Power (VA)
Reactive Power (VAR)
Kilowatts (kW)
BTU/hr

Wiring & Cost

Recommended Wire Gauge
Breaker Size
Monthly Running Cost

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the amps (current).
  2. Select the voltage (120V or 240V for typical US circuits).
  3. Results show watts, kilowatts, and BTU/hr equivalent.

Formula

DC: P (W) = V × A

Single-phase AC: P (W) = V × A × PF

Three-phase AC: P (W) = V × A × √3 × PF

1 kW = 1,000 W | 1 kW = 3,412 BTU/hr

Example

Example: 10 A, 120 V, PF = 0.9 → Real power = 1,080 W (1.08 kW) → 3,685 BTU/hr.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • For DC circuits: Watts = Amps × Volts. For single-phase AC: Watts = Amps × Volts × Power Factor. For three-phase AC: Watts = Amps × Volts × √3 × Power Factor.
  • Power factor (PF) is the ratio of real power (watts) to apparent power (volt-amps). Resistive loads like heaters have PF = 1.0. Motors and some electronics typically have PF = 0.8–0.95.
  • Watts (W) measure real power consumed. Volt-amps (VA) measure apparent power. For resistive loads they are equal; for reactive loads (motors, transformers), VA > W.
  • 15 amps × 120 volts = 1,800 watts (for a resistive DC or AC circuit with PF=1). With a typical AC power factor of 0.9, that is 1,620 watts of real power.
  • A 15A circuit typically uses 14 AWG wire. A 20A circuit uses 12 AWG. A 30A circuit uses 10 AWG. Always consult the NEC and a licensed electrician for your installation.

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