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HP to Amps Converter — Power Converter
HP ↔ Amps Converter
Electrical
0
Inputs
Formula
01

What this converter does

This converter estimates a motor’s full-load current in amps from its horsepower rating, for single-phase and three-phase supplies. Enter the voltage, power factor and efficiency, pick the phase, and read the current — or swap to go from amps back to HP. It updates as you type.

Horsepower is mechanical output, so the motor draws more electrical power by its efficiency: input watts = HP × 746 ÷ η. Always size cables and overloads to the nameplate current where available. For the power itself, see the HP to kW converter.

02

The units it covers

Motor current depends on four inputs beyond the horsepower — phase, voltage, power factor and efficiency.

View all units & their values
UnitSymbolValueMainly used
Motor powerhpPMechanical output at the shaft
Full-load currentAILine current the motor draws
VoltageVVLine-to-line for three-phase
EfficiencyηetaOutput ÷ input, typically 0.85–0.95
03

The formula

Convert HP to input watts through efficiency, then to current like any load:

Conversion
A = HP × 746 ÷ (√3 × V × PF × η) — drop √3 for single-phase

Where:

  • HP = motor mechanical output
  • V = supply voltage (line-to-line for 3-phase)
  • PF = power factor, 0 to 1
  • η = motor efficiency, 0 to 1
04

Worked example

A 10 HP three-phase motor at 400 V, 0.85 PF, 0.9 efficiency. Find the current.

Step 1 · The formula
A = HP × 746 ÷ (√3 × V × PF × η)
Step 2 · Substitute
7457 ÷ (1.732 × 400 × 0.85 × 0.9) = 14.07 A

The motor draws roughly 14 A at full load — check the nameplate to confirm.

05

The units in this example

Motor powersymbol: hp

The mechanical output at the shaft. Because a motor is not perfectly efficient, its electrical input is HP × 746 ÷ efficiency, which sets the current.

Quick current checks
  • 1 hp = 745.7 W output
  • input W = HP × 746 ÷ η
  • 1 hp, 230 V, 1ph, 0.85 PF, 0.9 η = 4.24 A
  • 1 hp ≈ 0.746 kW
Full-load currentsymbol: A

The line current a motor draws at rated load. Estimated here from HP; use the nameplate FLC for cable and overload sizing where possible.

Quick current checks
  • A = HP × 746 ÷ (V × PF × η) — 1ph
  • A = HP × 746 ÷ (√3 × V × PF × η) — 3ph
  • lower η or PF → more current
  • √3 = 1.732
06

FAQ

QHow do I find motor amps from HP?
Convert HP to watts (HP × 746 ÷ efficiency), then divide by voltage, power factor and √3 for three-phase.
QWhy include efficiency?
A motor draws more electrical power than its shaft output, so efficiency raises the current it pulls.
08

Sources

US DOE — electric motors · US EIA — electricity basics

InfoCalculator Editorial Team Fact-checked
Updated Jul 2026 · 3 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team