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

What this converter does

This converter finds the current a load draws from its power in watts, for single-phase and three-phase circuits. Enter the voltage and power factor, pick the phase, and read the amps — handy for sizing cables and breakers. Swap the arrow to go from current back to watts.

Current is power divided by voltage times power factor; three-phase divides by an extra √3. Use a power factor of 1 for resistive loads. For power in kilowatts, see the kW to Amps converter.

02

The units it covers

Current from watts depends on the phase, the voltage and — for AC — the power factor.

View all units & their values
UnitSymbolValueMainly used
Real powerWPUseful power delivered
CurrentAIAmperes drawn from the supply
VoltageVVLine-to-line for three-phase
Power factorPFcos φ1 for resistive; under 1 for motors
03

The formula

Current is power divided by voltage times power factor:

Conversion
A = W ÷ (V × PF) (÷ √3 more for three-phase)

Where:

  • W = the power you typed, in watts
  • V = supply voltage (line-to-line for 3-phase)
  • PF = power factor, 1 for resistive loads
04

Worked example

A single-phase 230 V load of 2,300 W runs at a power factor of 1. Find the current.

Step 1 · The formula
A = W ÷ (V × PF)
Step 2 · Substitute
2,300 ÷ (230 × 1) = 10 A

The circuit draws 10 A — size the cable and breaker above this figure.

05

The units in this example

Real powersymbol: W

The useful power the load consumes, in watts. Divided by voltage and power factor it gives the current; three-phase divides by an extra √3.

Quick current checks
  • A = W ÷ (V × PF) — 1ph
  • A = W ÷ (√3 × V × PF) — 3ph
  • 1,000 W = 1 kW
  • resistive load: PF = 1
Currentsymbol: A

The amperes drawn from the supply. Cables and circuit breakers are rated in amps, so this is what you size the wiring to.

Quick current checks
  • 2,300 W at 230 V, PF 1 = 10 A
  • W = V × A × PF — 1ph
  • 1 A = 1 coulomb per second
  • always size protection above the draw
06

FAQ

QHow do I convert watts to amps?
Divide watts by volts times power factor. For three-phase, divide by an extra √3.
QWhat power factor should I use?
Use 1 for resistive loads like heaters, or the nameplate value for motors and reactive loads.
08

Sources

US DOE — estimating energy use · US EIA — electricity basics

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