Power Calculator
Estimate watts, kilowatts, apparent power, and current for single-phase and three-phase systems.
Electrical Inputs
Calculated Results
⚠️ Engineering Caution:
This tool is intended for screening and pre-check workflows. Results are usually directionally useful, but they
can still shift with equipment selection, environmental conditions, naming conventions, revision status, or
interpretation rules. Confirm any value that affects ordering, substitution, compliance, or installation before
acting on it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the basic power formula for electrical loads?
For single-phase systems, real power is typically voltage × current × power factor. For balanced three-phase systems, multiply voltage × current × power factor by √3.
Why does this calculator show both real power and apparent power?
Real power in watts shows the power that performs useful work, while apparent power in VA or kVA reflects the total electrical demand seen by the source and conductors.
What This Calculator Is For
Electrical troubleshooting and load planning often start with simple questions:
- If I know volts and amps, how many watts is that?
- What changes between single-phase and three-phase power?
- How do watts compare with apparent power in VA or kVA?
- If I know watts, what current should I expect?
- How much does power factor matter in real-world current calculations?
This calculator is designed to answer those questions quickly for practical engineering work.
What It Calculates
The tool supports common forward and reverse calculations for electrical power:
- power from voltage and current
- current from voltage and power
- apparent power from volts and amps
- comparison of real power and apparent power
- single-phase and three-phase estimates
It is intended as a fast utility for field checks, panel planning, equipment comparison, and early-stage sizing conversations.
Core Relationships
For single-phase systems:
VA = V × AW = V × A × PFA = W ÷ (V × PF)
For balanced three-phase systems:
VA = √3 × V × AW = √3 × V × A × PFA = W ÷ (√3 × V × PF)
Where:
Vis voltageAis currentPFis power factor
Practical Use Cases
This kind of calculator is useful for:
- checking whether measured current matches expected load
- converting between W and kW for procurement or spec sheets
- comparing single-phase and three-phase loads
- estimating feeder impact of added equipment
- sanity-checking nameplate data
- preparing quick internal engineering notes
Important Limitations
This tool is designed for fast practical estimation, not for final design validation. It does not replace:
- detailed load studies
- harmonics or waveform distortion analysis
- transient and inrush review
- code-based conductor or breaker sizing
- manufacturer-certified performance data
Results may differ from field measurements when:
- voltage is unstable
- the load is unbalanced
- power factor changes with operating point
- drives or nonlinear loads distort waveforms
- measurements are taken during startup or transient behavior
FAQ
What is the difference between watts and VA?
Watts represent real power. VA represents apparent power. When power factor is below 1.0, apparent power is higher than real power.
When should I use single-phase vs three-phase mode?
Use single-phase mode for typical single-phase equipment and branch circuits. Use three-phase mode for balanced three-phase motors, panels, and industrial loads where line-to-line voltage and line current are known.
Can I use this for exact design values?
Use it as a fast engineering estimate. For final design, always compare against nameplate values, measured data, and applicable code requirements.