Kilowatt-Hours to Amp-Hours Converter
Convert electrical energy (kWh) to battery charge capacity (Ah) instantly. Perfect for solar panel systems, battery banks, and electrical planning.
Quick Conversions
Conversion Formula
The conversion from kilowatt-hours to amp-hours requires the voltage at which the charge is stored. The formula below shows the relationship between energy and charge:
Where:
- Ah = Amp-hours (electrical charge)
- kWh = Kilowatt-hours (electrical energy)
- V = Voltage in volts
Convert 8 kWh of energy at 24V to amp-hours:
Convert 3.5 kWh at 12V to amp-hours:
Convert 15 kWh at 48V to amp-hours:
kWh to Ah Conversion Chart
| Energy (kWh) | 12V System (Ah) | 24V System (Ah) | 36V System (Ah) | 48V System (Ah) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 kWh | 41.67 Ah | 20.83 Ah | 13.89 Ah | 10.42 Ah |
| 1 kWh | 83.33 Ah | 41.67 Ah | 27.78 Ah | 20.83 Ah |
| 2 kWh | 166.67 Ah | 83.33 Ah | 55.56 Ah | 41.67 Ah |
| 3 kWh | 250.00 Ah | 125.00 Ah | 83.33 Ah | 62.50 Ah |
| 4 kWh | 333.33 Ah | 166.67 Ah | 111.11 Ah | 83.33 Ah |
| 5 kWh | 416.67 Ah | 208.33 Ah | 138.89 Ah | 104.17 Ah |
| 6 kWh | 500.00 Ah | 250.00 Ah | 166.67 Ah | 125.00 Ah |
| 7 kWh | 583.33 Ah | 291.67 Ah | 194.44 Ah | 145.83 Ah |
| 8 kWh | 666.67 Ah | 333.33 Ah | 222.22 Ah | 166.67 Ah |
| 10 kWh | 833.33 Ah | 416.67 Ah | 277.78 Ah | 208.33 Ah |
| 15 kWh | 1,250.00 Ah | 625.00 Ah | 416.67 Ah | 312.50 Ah |
| 20 kWh | 1,666.67 Ah | 833.33 Ah | 555.56 Ah | 416.67 Ah |
What is a Kilowatt-Hour?
A kilowatt-hour (kWh) measures electrical energy consumption or production. One kWh equals the energy used by a 1,000-watt appliance running for one hour.
- Used in electricity billing
- Solar panel output rating
- Home energy consumption
- 1 kWh = 1,000 watt-hours
What is an Amp-Hour?
An amp-hour (Ah) measures electrical charge capacity, commonly used for batteries. One Ah is the charge transferred by one ampere of current flowing for one hour.
- Battery capacity rating
- Charge storage measure
- Solar battery sizing
- Related to voltage level
Common Applications
Solar Power Systems
Solar installations require converting daily energy production (kWh) to battery capacity (Ah) for proper system sizing. Most residential solar systems use 12V, 24V, or 48V battery banks.
RV and Marine Batteries
Recreational vehicles and boats typically use 12V battery systems. Converting your daily energy needs from kWh to Ah helps determine the right battery bank size for your trips.
Off-Grid Living
Off-grid homes need accurate conversion between energy usage (kWh from utility bills) and battery capacity (Ah) to design self-sufficient power systems with adequate storage.
Electric Vehicles
While EVs typically rate batteries in kWh, the underlying cell capacity is measured in Ah. The conversion depends on the battery pack voltage, which varies by vehicle model.
Popular Battery Voltage Systems
| Voltage System | Common Uses | Conversion Factor |
|---|---|---|
| 12V | Cars, RVs, small solar systems, boats | 1 kWh = 83.33 Ah |
| 24V | Larger RVs, marine vessels, medium solar | 1 kWh = 41.67 Ah |
| 36V | Electric bikes, industrial equipment | 1 kWh = 27.78 Ah |
| 48V | Large solar systems, telecom, data centers | 1 kWh = 20.83 Ah |
| 120V | US residential AC power | 1 kWh = 8.33 Ah |
| 230V | European residential AC power | 1 kWh = 4.35 Ah |
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Conversions
Watt-Hours (Wh) to Amp-Hours
Formula: Ah = Wh ÷ V
Convert smaller energy amounts to amp-hours by dividing watt-hours by voltage.
Amp-Hours to Kilowatt-Hours
Formula: kWh = (Ah × V) ÷ 1,000
Reverse calculation to find energy from battery capacity and voltage.
Milliamp-Hours (mAh) to Amp-Hours
Formula: Ah = mAh ÷ 1,000
Common for smaller batteries like phone or laptop batteries.
Watts to Amps
Formula: A = W ÷ V
Convert power to current when voltage is known.
Practical Sizing Tips
Review your electricity bills or use a power meter to measure daily consumption. Average household uses 20-30 kWh per day.
12V systems work for small setups (under 1 kWh). 24V suits medium systems (1-3 kWh). 48V is best for larger installations (over 3 kWh).
Use the formula to convert your daily kWh to Ah at your chosen voltage. This gives you minimum battery capacity needed.
Multiply by 1.5 to account for efficiency losses, depth of discharge limits, and days of autonomy. Batteries last longer when not fully discharged.
