kVA to kW Calculator

Convert apparent power to real power instantly — single-phase and three-phase.

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The kVA to kW calculator converts apparent power to real (active) power — and back — using the power factor relationship that lies at the heart of all AC electrical systems. It handles single-phase and three-phase circuits, computes reactive power (kVAR), and lets you derive kVA directly from a voltage and current measurement when you have a clamp meter to hand. A built-in quick-reference table lists common kVA ratings against six typical power factors so you can cross-check transformer, generator, and UPS sizing at a glance.

How it works

Every AC power circuit has three power quantities that form a right-triangle relationship known as the power triangle:

  • Real power P (kW) — the portion converted to useful work (heat, light, torque).
  • Apparent power S (kVA) — the total power the supply must deliver, combining real and reactive components.
  • Reactive power Q (kVAR) — the portion that oscillates between source and inductive / capacitive loads without doing work.

The three are related by: S² = P² + Q², and the power factor is simply PF = P / S.

Single-phase conversion

kW = kVA x PF   (to convert apparent to real)

kVA = kW / PF   (to convert real to apparent)

If you are measuring directly: S = V x I / 1000 (kVA), then P = S x PF (kW).

Three-phase conversion

For a balanced three-phase system the formula gains the √3 factor:

S = sqrt(3) x V_L x I_L / 1000 kVA

where V_L is the line-to-line voltage and I_L is the line current. Real power then follows: P = S x PF kW. The √3 factor ≈ 1.7321 arises from the 120° phase displacement between the three sinusoidal voltages.

Reactive power

Once you know S (kVA) and P (kW), reactive power is:

Q = sqrt(S² − P²) kVAR

The calculator shows Q in the result cards so you can size power-factor-correction capacitor banks to cancel unwanted reactive current.

Worked example

A three-phase induction motor draws 14.43 A at 400 V (line-to-line) and has a nameplate power factor of 0.85.

  1. Apparent power: sqrt(3) x 400 x 14.43 / 1000 ≈ 10.0 kVA
  2. Real power: 10.0 x 0.85 = 8.5 kW
  3. Reactive power: sqrt(10.0² − 8.5²) ≈ 5.27 kVAR

The motor draws 10 kVA of capacity from the transformer even though it delivers only 8.5 kW of shaft power — the 5.27 kVAR must still flow through cables and switchgear, sizing them for the full apparent-power demand.

LoadkVAPFkW
Small UPS1 kVA0.90.90 kW
Office server rack5 kVA0.954.75 kW
Induction motor10 kVA0.808.00 kW
Generator set100 kVA0.8080.00 kW
Distribution transformer500 kVA0.90450.00 kW

All figures are calculated instantly in your browser — no data is uploaded or stored.

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