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    How to Convert Watts to BTU (and BTU/hr to Watts)

    ZacharyWilliam

    Fast formulas, one-glance tables, and practical examples for heaters, ACs, and heat pumps. “BTU” below means BTU per hour (BTU/hr), the standard way to express heat power.

    Convert Watts to BTU

    At-a-Glance Conversion Table

    Most-requested conversions at a glance:

    Watts (W) ≈ BTU/hr
    500 W 1,706 BTU/hr
    1,000 W 3,412 BTU/hr
    1,200 W 4,095 BTU/hr
    1,500 W 5,118 BTU/hr
    1,800 W 6,142 BTU/hr
    2,000 W 6,824 BTU/hr
    2,500 W 8,530 BTU/hr

    Common AC Sizes (BTU/hr → Watts)

    Thermal capacity in watts for popular AC sizes:

    BTU/hr ≈ Watts (W)
    5,000 1,465.4 W
    8,000 2,344.6 W
    10,000 2,930.7 W
    12,000 3,516.9 W
    14,000 4,103.0 W
    18,000 5,275.3 W
    24,000 7,033.7 W

    Note: Electrical input watts for ACs depend on efficiency (EER/SEER/COP) and are usually far lower than their thermal watts above.

    Formulas (Watts ⇄ BTU/hr)

    Exact constant: 1 W = 3.412142 BTU/hr (because 1 BTU = 1,055.06 J and 1 W = 1 J/s).

    Watts → BTU/hr

    BTU/hr = Watts × 3.412142

    Rule of thumb: multiply watts by 3.412.

    BTU/hr → Watts

    Watts = BTU/hr × 0.29307107

    Rule of thumb: divide BTU/hr by 3.412.

    Units reminder: BTU is energy, BTU/hr is power (heat flow). Conversions here use BTU/hr.

    Watts → BTU/hr Conversion Table

    Multiply watts by 3.412 to get BTU/hr (rounded to nearest BTU/hr)
    Watts (W) ≈ BTU/hr
    50 171
    75 256
    100 341
    150 512
    200 682
    250 853
    300 1,024
    350 1,194
    400 1,365
    450 1,535
    500 1,706
    600 2,047
    700 2,388
    750 2,559
    800 2,730
    900 3,071
    1,000 3,412
    1,200 4,095
    1,500 5,118
    1,800 6,142
    2,000 6,824
    2,500 8,530
    3,000 10,237
    3,500 11,942
    4,000 13,649
    4,500 15,354
    5,000 17,061
    6,000 20,473
    7,000 23,885
    8,000 27,298
    9,000 30,710
    10,000 34,121

    BTU/hr → Watts Conversion Table

    Multiply BTU/hr by 0.293071 to get watts (rounded to 0.1 W)
    BTU/hr ≈ Watts (W)
    500 146.5
    800 234.5
    1,000 293.1
    1,200 351.7
    1,400 410.3
    1,500 439.6
    1,800 527.5
    2,000 586.1
    2,500 732.7
    3,000 879.2
    3,500 1,025.7
    4,000 1,172.3
    4,500 1,318.8
    5,000 1,465.4
    6,000 1,758.4
    7,000 2,051.5
    8,000 2,344.6
    9,000 2,637.6
    10,000 2,930.7
    12,000 3,516.9
    14,000 4,103.0
    15,000 4,396.1
    18,000 5,275.3
    20,000 5,861.4
    22,000 6,447.6
    24,000 7,033.7
    30,000 8,792.1
    36,000 10,550.5
    48,000 14,067.6
    60,000 17,584.3

    kW → BTU/hr (Quick Reference)

    1 kW = 3,412 BTU/hr (rounded)
    kW ≈ BTU/hr
    0.2 682
    0.3 1,024
    0.5 1,706
    0.75 2,559
    1.0 3,412
    1.2 4,095
    1.5 5,118
    2.0 6,824
    2.5 8,530
    3.0 10,236
    3.5 11,942
    4.0 13,649
    5.0 17,061

    Worked Examples

    1) Convert 1,500 W space heater to BTU/hr

    BTU/hr = 1,500 × 3.412142 = 5,118.2 → ≈ 5,118 BTU/hr

    Tip: Electric resistance heaters are ~100% efficient at turning electrical watts into heat, so this conversion approximates the actual heating output.

    2) Convert 12,000 BTU/hr window AC to watts

    Thermal watts = 12,000 × 0.29307107 = 3,516.9 W

    Important: That’s the thermal capacity. The electrical input is typically lower and depends on efficiency: Winput = BTU/hr ÷ EER. For example, EER 10 → ~1,200 W input.

    3) Heat pump note

    Heat pumps deliver more BTU/hr than their electrical input suggests because they move heat rather than create it. With a COP of 3, a 1,000 W input could deliver about 3,000 W of thermal output (~10,236 BTU/hr).

    UDPOWER Picks for Heat/Cool Loads (Watts ⇄ BTU/hr)

    Match your device’s electrical input (W) to a power station’s rated output. For resistive heat (space heaters), you can estimate heat output as BTU/hr ≈ W × 3.412. For AC units, check electrical watts (BTU/hr is thermal).

    UDPOWER S1200 Portable Power Station

    portable power station 1000W, 1190Wh LiFePO4 Battery

    • 1,190Wh LiFePO₄ • 1,200W rated (UDTURBO 1,800W surge)
    • ~26.0 lbs15 ports (5 AC + 10 DC) • UPSPrime <10 ms
    • Heat equivalence hint (resistive): 1,200W ≈ 4,095 BTU/hr

    Great for: portable ACs and heater loads ≤ 1,200W input (check nameplate watts).

    View S1200

    UDPOWER C600 Portable Power Station

    • 596Wh LiFePO₄ • 600W rated (up to 1,200W max)
    • ~12.3 lbs • Multiple outputs (2× AC, USB-C PD, USB-A, 12V car, DC5521)
    • Heat equivalence hint (resistive): 600W ≈ 2,047 BTU/hr

    Great for: dehumidifiers, personal heaters, fans, and room devices ≤ 600W input.

    View C600

    UDPOWER C400 Portable Power Station

    portable power station 400W UDPOWER C400

    • 256Wh LiFePO₄ • 400W rated (800W surge)
    • 9+ outputs incl. 2× AC, 2× USB-C PD, 12V car, DC5521 • Solar-ready
    • Heat equivalence hint (resistive): 400W ≈ 1,365 BTU/hr

    Great for: personal space heaters, air movers, mini dehumidifiers, spot cooling ≤ 400W.

    View C400

    UDPOWER C200 Portable Power Station

    • 192Wh LiFePO₄ • 200W rated (400W surge)
    • ~5.4 lbs • AC + USB-C + USB-A + DC • LED light (SOS)
    • Heat equivalence hint (resistive): 200W ≈ 682 BTU/hr

    Great for: heated blankets, desk fans, CPAPs, and light-duty loads ≤ 200W.

    View C200

    Notes: Always size to the device’s electrical input watts. For motors/compressors (ACs, dehumidifiers), account for starting surge and efficiency. Runtime depends on battery Wh, load watts, and losses.

    Continue Reading:

    1. How to Convert Lumens to Watts
    2. How to Convert HP to Wattage
    3. The Ultimate Guide to Volts to Watts Conversion
    4. Milliamp-Hours (mAh) to Watt-Hours (Wh)

    FAQs

    What’s the difference between BTU and BTU/hr?

    BTU is an amount of heat (energy). BTU/hr is a rate of heat flow (power). Conversions here use BTU/hr because watts are also a unit of power.

    Why don’t AC electrical watts match the BTU→W table?

    The table gives thermal watts. Real electrical input depends on efficiency (EER/SEER/COP), operating mode, and conditions. For quick estimates, divide BTU/hr by the EER to approximate electrical watts.

    How precise are these numbers?

    We use 1 W = 3.412142 BTU/hr and round for readability. For engineering calculations, keep more decimals and state assumptions.

    How do I convert kilowatts (kW) to BTU/hr?

    Multiply kW by 3,412 (since 1 kW = 1,000 W). Example: 2.5 kW ≈ 2,500 × 3.412142 = 8,530 BTU/hr.

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