Skip to content
My Cart(0 items)

Our Best Sellers
  • Save 20% OFF
    UDPOWER C200 Portable Power Station, 200W Pure Sine Wave
    192Wh 200W 5.4 lbs
    $159.00 $199.99
  • Save 24% OFF
    UDPOWER C400 Portable Power Station
    256Wh 400W 6.88 lbs
    $159.99 $209.99
  • Save 16% OFF
    UDPOWER C600 Portable Power Station
    596 Wh 600W 12.3 lbs
    $299.99 $359.00
  • Save 16% OFF
    UDPOWER C600 Portable Power Station - Brown
    596 Wh 600W 12.3 lbs
    $299.99 $359.00
  • Save 16% OFF
    UDPOWER C600 Portable Power Station - Grey
    596 Wh 600W 12.3 lbs
    $299.99 $359.00
  • Free Shipping | US Warehouse | 24-Hour Fast Dispatch

    The Ultimate Guide to Volts to Watts Conversion

    ZacharyWilliam

    A deep, practical guide to converting Volts ↔ Watts for DC, AC single-phase, and three-phase systems—featuring ready-to-use lookup tables and a hyperlinked table of contents.

    1) Introduction

    When you choose a power supply or check if a circuit can carry a load, you almost always need to relate voltage (V) to power (W). In DC, the relationship is linear and simple. In AC, you must account for RMS values and power factor (PF) to get real power (W). This guide explains the minimum theory you need, then gives you ready-to-use tables so you can look up answers immediately for common voltages and current ranges in both single-phase and three-phase systems.

    What you’ll get here—clear definitions of V and W, the exact formulas behind the tables, large conversion tables for DC, 120 V / 230 V AC single-phase, and 208 V / 400 V three-phase, plus practical advice on reading nameplates, estimating PF sensibly, and avoiding common mistakes.

    Volts to Watts Conversion


    2) Core Concepts (focused on V and W)

    Voltage (V) is electrical potential difference. In AC, we use RMS voltage, which is what your multimeter shows and what equipment nameplates list (e.g., 120 V or 230 V).

    Power (W) is the rate of energy transfer that actually does work and generates heat.

    We reference Current (A) only as an input to relate V and W (e.g., P = V · I), Resistance (Ω) only when the load is resistive and you know R (P = V2/R), and Power Factor (PF) only for AC real power: 0 < PF ≤ 1. Purely resistive loads have PF≈1; many electronic or motor loads fall between ~0.6–0.95 unless corrected.

    DC vs AC: DC tables are exact for steady current. In AC, use RMS V and RMS I, then multiply by PF to get real watts.
    Back to top

    3) Fundamental Equations

    Ohm’s Law: V = I · R

    Power (general): P = V · I

    Resistive forms: P = V2/R = I2 · R

    AC, single-phase (real power): P = VRMS · IRMS · PF

    AC, three-phase (line-to-line): P = √3 · VL–L · I · PF

    Why PF matters: If you ignore PF in AC, you’ll over/under-estimate the real watts. Example: 10 A at 230 V with PF=0.7 is 1610 W, not 2300 W.
    Back to top

    4) The Volts to Watts (V → W)

    Pick your voltage, current, and PF (for AC), then read off Watts. All AC values use RMS.

    4.1 DC quick table — Watts for common Voltages × Currents

    Formula: P = V · I (rounded to whole watts)
    Current (A) \ Voltage (V) 3.3 V 5 V 9 V 12 V 19 V 24 V 48 V
    0.5 2 3 5 6 10 12 24
    1 3 5 9 12 19 24 48
    2 7 10 18 24 38 48 96
    3 10 15 27 36 57 72 144
    5 17 25 45 60 95 120 240
    8 26 40 72 96 152 192 384
    10 33 50 90 120 190 240 480

    If your exact value isn’t listed, choose the nearest row/column and scale proportionally (e.g., 12 V × 4 A → ~48 W).

    4.2 AC single-phase (RMS) — Watts at 120 V

    Formula: P = V · I · PF (V=120 V RMS; rounded)
    Current (A) \ PF 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
    1 72 84 96 108 120
    2 144 168 192 216 240
    3 216 252 288 324 360
    5 360 420 480 540 600
    8 576 672 768 864 960
    10 720 840 960 1080 1200
    12 864 1008 1152 1296 1440
    15 1080 1260 1440 1620 1800

    4.3 AC single-phase (RMS) — Watts at 230 V

    Formula: P = V · I · PF (V=230 V RMS; rounded)
    Current (A) \ PF 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
    1 138 161 184 207 230
    2 276 322 368 414 460
    3 414 483 552 621 690
    5 690 805 920 1035 1150
    8 1104 1288 1472 1656 1840
    10 1380 1610 1840 2070 2300
    12 1656 1932 2208 2484 2760
    15 2070 2415 2760 3105 3450

    4.4 Three-phase (line-to-line) — Watts at 400 V

    Formula: P = √3 · VL–L · I · PF (V=400 V L–L; rounded)
    Current (A) \ PF 0.8 0.9 1.0
    5 2771 3118 3464
    10 5543 6235 6928
    16 8868 9977 11085
    20 11085 12471 13856
    32 17736 19953 22170
    40 22170 24942 27713
    63 34918 39283 43648

    4.5 Three-phase (line-to-line) — Watts at 208 V

    Formula: P = √3 · VL–L · I · PF (V=208 V L–L; rounded)
    Current (A) \ PF 0.8 0.9 1.0
    5 1441 1621 1801
    10 2882 3242 3603
    16 4611 5188 5766
    20 5766 6484 7204
    32 9226 10375 11527
    40 11527 12969 14409
    63 18159 20429 22699
    Back to top

    5) Watts to Volts (W → V)

    Given target watts and allowable current, these tables show the required RMS voltage. For AC, include PF.

    5.1 DC quick table — Volts for common Watts × Currents

    Formula: V = P / I (rounded to 0.01 V)
    Power (W) \ Current (A) 0.5 A 1 A 2 A 5 A 10 A
    5 10.00 5.00 2.50 1.00 0.50
    10 20.00 10.00 5.00 2.00 1.00
    20 40.00 20.00 10.00 4.00 2.00
    50 100.00 50.00 25.00 10.00 5.00
    100 200.00 100.00 50.00 20.00 10.00
    200 400.00 200.00 100.00 40.00 20.00
    500 1000.00 500.00 250.00 100.00 50.00

    Use case: If you must deliver 100 W at ≤ 5 A, you need at least 20 V DC.

    5.2 AC single-phase (RMS) — Volts for common Watts × Currents

    Formula: V = P / (I · PF) (rounded to 0.1 V). Three common PF slices:

    PF = 1.0

    Power (W) \ Current (A) 1 A 2 A 3 A 5 A 10 A 15 A
    60 60.0 30.0 20.0 12.0 6.0 4.0
    120 120.0 60.0 40.0 24.0 12.0 8.0
    240 240.0 120.0 80.0 48.0 24.0 16.0
    600 600.0 300.0 200.0 120.0 60.0 40.0
    1200 1200.0 600.0 400.0 240.0 120.0 80.0
    1800 1800.0 900.0 600.0 360.0 180.0 120.0

    PF = 0.9

    Power (W) \ Current (A) 1 A 2 A 3 A 5 A 10 A 15 A
    60 66.7 33.3 22.2 13.3 6.7 4.4
    120 133.3 66.7 44.4 26.7 13.3 8.9
    240 266.7 133.3 88.9 53.3 26.7 17.8
    600 666.7 333.3 222.2 133.3 66.7 44.4
    1200 1333.3 666.7 444.4 266.7 133.3 88.9
    1800 2000.0 1000.0 666.7 400.0 200.0 133.3

    PF = 0.8

    Power (W) \ Current (A) 1 A 2 A 3 A 5 A 10 A 15 A
    60 75.0 37.5 25.0 15.0 7.5 5.0
    120 150.0 75.0 50.0 30.0 15.0 10.0
    240 300.0 150.0 100.0 60.0 30.0 20.0
    600 750.0 375.0 250.0 150.0 75.0 50.0
    1200 1500.0 750.0 500.0 300.0 150.0 100.0
    1800 2250.0 1125.0 750.0 450.0 225.0 150.0

    5.3 Three-phase (RMS, line-to-line) — Volts for common Watts × Currents

    Formula: VL–L = P / (√3 · I · PF) (rounded to whole volts).

    PF = 1.0

    Power (W) \ Current (A) 5 A 10 A 16 A 20 A 32 A 40 A 63 A
    1000 115 58 36 29 18 14 9
    2000 231 115 72 58 36 29 18
    5000 577 289 181 144 90 72 46
    10000 1155 577 361 289 181 144 92
    20000 2310 1155 721 577 361 289 183
    30000 3465 1732 1082 866 542 433 275

    PF = 0.9

    Power (W) \ Current (A) 5 A 10 A 16 A 20 A 32 A 40 A 63 A
    1000 128 64 40 32 20 16 10
    2000 256 128 80 64 40 32 20
    5000 641 321 201 160 100 80 51
    10000 1282 641 401 321 200 160 102
    20000 2564 1282 802 641 401 321 203
    30000 3846 1923 1203 962 601 481 305

    PF = 0.8

    Power (W) \ Current (A) 5 A 10 A 16 A 20 A 32 A 40 A 63 A
    1000 144 72 45 36 23 18 11
    2000 288 144 90 72 45 36 23
    5000 721 361 226 180 113 90 57
    10000 1442 721 451 361 226 180 114
    20000 2884 1442 902 721 451 361 228
    30000 4326 2163 1353 1082 676 541 342
    Back to top

    6) Getting the Right Inputs

    Nameplates & spec sheets. Look for: Voltage (RMS) and frequency (e.g., 120 V/60 Hz or 230 V/50 Hz); Current (RMS) rating—often “Max” or “Typical”; and PF—sometimes listed, often omitted. If PF is missing, use 0.8–0.9 as a reasonable planning assumption for many appliances and switch-mode supplies; motors and some LED drivers can be lower unless corrected.

    Measurement tips. A clamp meter around a single conductor reads RMS current. Combine with known RMS voltage and your PF assumption (or a plug-in power meter that reports PF directly) to estimate watts accurately.

    Constant-voltage vs constant-current behavior. Many electronics are fed by constant-voltage rails but draw variable current with workload and temperature. Treat tables as planning tools; verify real devices under real conditions.

    Back to top

    7) Edge Cases & Common Mistakes

    • Peak vs RMS confusion (AC). Using peak numbers will inflate results by ~√2. Always use RMS values.
    • Ignoring PF. At the same V and I, PF=0.7 yields ~30% fewer real watts than PF=1.0.
    • Single-phase vs three-phase mix-ups. Three-phase real power uses the √3 multiplier and line-to-line voltage.
    • Inrush vs steady-state. Motors and compressors can draw several times their running current at startup; size wiring/protection accordingly.
    • “Label ≠ reality.” Nameplates may quote maximum or typical; actual W depends on mode, temperature, and PF.
    Back to top

    8) Practical Scenarios

    DC rails (12 V or 24 V). If a controller draws 3 A at 24 V, table 4.1 shows ~72 W. Add a 20–30% margin and choose a 90–100 W supply for headroom.

    Household single-phase. A tool listed at 10 A on 120 V with PF = 0.9 corresponds to ~1080 W (table 4.2). If your branch circuit is 15 A and other loads are present, you may be near the limit—plan accordingly.

    Three-phase workshop. A 400 V L–L line at 32 A, PF = 0.9 supports ~19.95 kW (table 4.4). If you need 22 kW, either raise current, improve PF, or move to a higher-voltage/ampacity feed.

    Back to top

    9) Quick Reference

    • DC: P=V·I, P=V2/R, V=P/I
    • AC 1-Φ: P=V·I·PF, V=P/(I·PF)
    • AC 3-Φ (L–L): P=√3·V·I·PF, V=P/(√3·I·PF)

    Rule-of-thumb anchors: 120 V @ PF=1 → ~120 W/A; 230 V @ PF=1 → ~230 W/A; 400 V 3-Φ L–L @ PF=1 → ~693 W/A; 208 V 3-Φ L–L @ PF=1 → ~360 W/A.

    Back to top

    10) FAQ (strictly V ↔ W)

    Q1: Can I get W from V without knowing A?
    For DC resistive loads: yes, if you know R (P=V2/R). For AC, you also need PF; without PF (and I or R), you can’t find real watts.

    Q2: If I change from 120 V to 230 V, do watts double?
    Not automatically. W = V · I · PF (AC). If the device draws proportionally less current at 230 V (as many supplies do), watts may stay comparable. Check the nameplate or measure.

    Q3: How accurate are the table values?
    They’re rounded to practical digits using RMS V and I. Real devices vary with PF, temperature, and workload. Treat tables as planning-grade and validate with a meter for critical designs.

    Q4: What PF should I assume if it’s not listed?
    Use 0.8–0.9 for many modern electronic loads as a cautious starting point. Motors or poorly corrected drivers may be lower; measure when in doubt.

    Back to top

    11) Conclusion & Notes

    Converting Volts ↔ Watts is straightforward once you anchor on RMS values and PF in AC. Use the formulas to understand what’s happening; use the tables to make fast, defensible decisions. Build margin for startup currents and real-world variability, and validate with measurements for critical or safety-related applications.

    • AC values assume RMS quantities.
    • Three-phase tables use line-to-line voltage.
    • All numbers are rounded for clarity; pick the next-size-up device when sizing power and wiring.
    Back to blog

    Leave a comment

    Our Best Portable Power Station

    Save 20% OFF
    UDPOWER C200 Portable Power Station, 200W Pure Sine Wave
    192Wh 200W 5.4 lbs
    $159.00 $199.99
    Save 24% OFF
    UDPOWER C400 Portable Power Station
    256Wh 400W 6.88 lbs
    $159.99 $209.99
    Save 16% OFF
    UDPOWER C600 Portable Power Station - Brown
    596 Wh 600W 12.3 lbs
    $299.99 $359.00
    Save 21% OFF
    UDPOWER S1200 Portable Power Station
    1,190Wh 1,200W 26.0 lbs
    $395.99 $499.99