Table of Contents
kW vs kVA: Real Power vs Apparent Power Complete Guide
Quick Verdict
Understanding kW and kVA is fundamental to electrical system design. These aren't competing standards—they measure different aspects of electrical power that both matter for different purposes.
Bottom Line: Use kW when calculating energy consumption, equipment output, and electricity costs. Use kVA when sizing transformers, generators, UPS systems, and cables. Power factor connects them: kW = kVA × PF.
For most practical purposes: a 100 kW load requires 110-130 kVA of transformer capacity (depending on power factor), and a 100 kVA generator delivers only 80-85 kW of usable power.
At-a-Glance Comparison Table
| Feature | kW (Kilowatts) | kVA (Kilovolt-Amperes) | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| What It Measures | Real power (useful work) | Apparent power (total supplied) | — |
| Symbol | P | S | — |
| Formula (AC) | — | ||
| Used For | Energy bills, output ratings | Equipment sizing | — |
| Utility Billing | kWh energy charges | Demand charges (some utilities) | — |
| Equipment Ratings | Motor output, heater capacity | Transformers, generators | — |
| Relationship to Current | Depends on PF | Directly proportional | — |
| For Resistive Loads | kW = kVA | kVA = kW | Tie |
| For Inductive Loads | kW < kVA | kVA > kW | — |
Understanding Real Power (kW)
Real power is the actual energy that performs useful work in an electrical system. It's measured in kilowatts (kW) and represents:
- Mechanical work: Running motors, pumps, compressors
- Heat production: Electric heaters, ovens, process heating
- Light production: All lighting systems
- Electronic operation: Computers, controls, communications
Key Characteristics of kW
- Appears on utility bills as kWh (energy consumption)
- Motor output ratings are in kW (or horsepower: 1 HP ≈ 0.746 kW)
- Represents actual work capability
- What you pay for in energy charges
Real Power Formula
For AC single-phase:
For AC three-phase:
Where is the power factor.
Understanding Apparent Power (kVA)
Apparent power is the total power that must be supplied by the source, regardless of how much performs useful work. It's measured in kilovolt-amperes (kVA) and represents:
- Total current flow: What conductors must carry
- Equipment thermal loading: What causes heating in windings
- Infrastructure capacity: What transformers and generators must deliver
Key Characteristics of kVA
- Transformers, generators, UPS systems rated in kVA
- Determines cable sizing and conductor ampacity
- Always equal to or greater than kW
- Some utilities charge demand based on kVA
Apparent Power Formula
For AC single-phase:
For AC three-phase:
No power factor term—apparent power is simply voltage times current.
The Power Triangle: How kW and kVA Relate
The relationship between real power, reactive power, and apparent power forms a right triangle:
Or in practical units:
Where:
- kW = Real power (horizontal leg)
- kVAR = Reactive power (vertical leg)
- kVA = Apparent power (hypotenuse)
Power Factor is the ratio of real to apparent power:
This determines how much of the apparent power does useful work. PF = 1.0 means all power is useful (resistive loads). PF = 0.8 means only 80% does useful work.
Why Equipment is Rated in kVA
Transformers and generators are rated in kVA rather than kW because:
Thermal Limits Depend on Current
The heat generated in transformer windings follows:
This heating depends on total current magnitude, not power factor. A transformer carrying 100A generates the same heat whether that current delivers 80 kW (at 0.8 PF) or 100 kW (at 1.0 PF).
Universal Application
Rating in kVA allows the same transformer specification to apply regardless of load characteristics:
| Transformer | Load PF | Available kW |
|---|---|---|
| 100 kVA | 1.0 | 100 kW |
| 100 kVA | 0.9 | 90 kW |
| 100 kVA | 0.8 | 80 kW |
| 100 kVA | 0.7 | 70 kW |
The transformer operates safely at 100 kVA in all cases—it's the user's responsibility to account for their power factor.
Conversion Formulas
kW to kVA (Sizing Equipment)
When you know your load in kW and need to size equipment:
kVA to kW (Understanding Capacity)
When you have equipment rated in kVA and need to know real power capacity:
Power Factor Impact Analysis
Power factor dramatically affects the kVA requirement for a given kW load:
| Power Factor | kVA per 100 kW | % Increase vs Unity | Typical Load Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.00 | 100 kVA | 0% | Resistive heaters |
| 0.95 | 105 kVA | 5% | Power factor corrected |
| 0.90 | 111 kVA | 11% | Well-managed facility |
| 0.85 | 118 kVA | 18% | Typical commercial |
| 0.80 | 125 kVA | 25% | Industrial with motors |
| 0.75 | 133 kVA | 33% | Heavy motor load |
| 0.70 | 143 kVA | 43% | Uncorrected industrial |
Cost Impact: Poor power factor (0.70-0.80) requires 25-43% larger transformers and generators than good power factor (0.95). This directly increases equipment costs. Many utilities also charge penalties for PF below 0.90 or 0.95.
Practical Applications
Transformer Sizing
- Calculate total kW load with demand factors (NEC Article 220)
- Determine expected power factor
- Convert to kVA: kVA = kW / PF
- Add 20-25% safety margin
- Select next standard transformer size
Generator Selection
Generators often have both ratings:
- kVA rating: Maximum apparent power
- kW rating: Maximum real power at rated PF
The limit reached first governs. A "100 kVA / 80 kW" generator at 0.8 PF:
- Can supply 100 kVA maximum
- Can supply 80 kW maximum
- At 0.9 PF: limited to 80 kW (not 90 kW)
- At 0.7 PF: limited to 70 kW by kVA (not 80 kW)
UPS System Selection
UPS systems are typically kVA-rated:
- Sum all load kW
- Estimate or measure power factor
- Calculate kVA = kW / PF
- Add 20-30% margin for future growth
- Select appropriate UPS rating
Common Mistakes to Avoid
| Mistake | Impact | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Assuming kW = kVA | Undersized equipment | Always account for power factor |
| Using wrong PF | Sizing errors | Measure or use conservative estimates |
| Ignoring PF variation | Overload at low PF | Use worst-case (lowest) expected PF |
| No safety margin | No growth capacity | Add 20-25% to calculations |
| Confusing ratings | Wrong equipment | Check both kW and kVA limits |
Related Tools
Use these calculators for kW and kVA conversions:
- kW to kVA Calculator - Convert real power to apparent power with power factor
- kVA to kW Calculator - Convert apparent power to real power
- Power Factor Calculator - Calculate and analyze power factor
- Transformer Sizing Calculator - Size transformers from kW loads
Key Takeaways
- kW is real power that does useful work; kVA is apparent power the source must supply
- Conversion formulas: kW = kVA × PF and kVA = kW / PF
- Equipment sizing: Use kVA for transformers, generators, UPS—they're rated for total current, not just useful power
- Power factor impact: Poor PF (0.70-0.80) requires 25-43% more kVA than good PF (0.95)
- Both matter: kW for energy/costs, kVA for infrastructure sizing
Further Reading
- kW to kVA Conversion Guide - Detailed conversion methodology
- kVA to kW Guide - Apparent to real power conversion
- Power Factor Guide - Complete power factor fundamentals
- Transformer Sizing Guide - Equipment selection
References & Standards
- IEC 60050-131: International definitions for kW, kVA, power factor
- IEEE 141: Recommended practice for industrial power systems
- IEEE C57.12.00: Transformer rating standards
- NEC Article 220: Load calculations and demand factors
Disclaimer: This comparison provides general technical guidance based on international standards. Equipment sizing should be verified with specific manufacturer data and local code requirements. Always consult licensed electrical engineers for critical installations.