mAh to kWh Converter
Convert milliamp-hours to kilowatt-hours with voltage input
Conversion Formula
Converting milliamp-hours to kilowatt-hours requires knowledge of the battery voltage. The formula accounts for both charge capacity and electrical potential.
This conversion is critical for calculating battery energy storage in portable power stations, smartphones, tablets, electric vehicles, and renewable energy systems.
Conversion Examples
A smartphone battery rated at 4,000 mAh with 3.8V voltage:
- Identify the values: 4,000 mAh and 3.8V
- Apply the formula: kWh = 4,000 × 3.8 ÷ 1,000,000
- Calculate: kWh = 15,200 ÷ 1,000,000
- Result: 0.0152 kWh or 15.2 Wh
A portable power bank rated at 20,000 mAh with 5V output:
- Values given: 20,000 mAh and 5V
- Formula application: kWh = 20,000 × 5 ÷ 1,000,000
- Calculation: kWh = 100,000 ÷ 1,000,000
- Final result: 0.1 kWh or 100 Wh
An EV battery module with 60,000 mAh capacity at 48V:
- Given specifications: 60,000 mAh and 48V
- Using the formula: kWh = 60,000 × 48 ÷ 1,000,000
- Perform calculation: kWh = 2,880,000 ÷ 1,000,000
- Answer: 2.88 kWh
mAh to kWh Conversion Table
At 3.7V (Typical Li-ion Battery)
| Capacity (mAh) | Voltage (V) | Energy (kWh) | Energy (Wh) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1,000 mAh | 3.7 V | 0.0037 kWh | 3.7 Wh |
| 2,000 mAh | 3.7 V | 0.0074 kWh | 7.4 Wh |
| 3,000 mAh | 3.7 V | 0.0111 kWh | 11.1 Wh |
| 5,000 mAh | 3.7 V | 0.0185 kWh | 18.5 Wh |
| 10,000 mAh | 3.7 V | 0.037 kWh | 37 Wh |
| 20,000 mAh | 3.7 V | 0.074 kWh | 74 Wh |
| 30,000 mAh | 3.7 V | 0.111 kWh | 111 Wh |
| 50,000 mAh | 3.7 V | 0.185 kWh | 185 Wh |
At 5V (USB Power Banks)
| Capacity (mAh) | Voltage (V) | Energy (kWh) | Energy (Wh) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5,000 mAh | 5 V | 0.025 kWh | 25 Wh |
| 10,000 mAh | 5 V | 0.05 kWh | 50 Wh |
| 15,000 mAh | 5 V | 0.075 kWh | 75 Wh |
| 20,000 mAh | 5 V | 0.1 kWh | 100 Wh |
| 25,000 mAh | 5 V | 0.125 kWh | 125 Wh |
| 30,000 mAh | 5 V | 0.15 kWh | 150 Wh |
At 12V (Automotive & Solar)
| Capacity (mAh) | Voltage (V) | Energy (kWh) | Energy (Wh) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10,000 mAh | 12 V | 0.12 kWh | 120 Wh |
| 20,000 mAh | 12 V | 0.24 kWh | 240 Wh |
| 50,000 mAh | 12 V | 0.6 kWh | 600 Wh |
| 100,000 mAh | 12 V | 1.2 kWh | 1,200 Wh |
| 200,000 mAh | 12 V | 2.4 kWh | 2,400 Wh |
Popular Battery Conversions
Modern smartphones typically range from 3,000-5,000 mAh at 3.7-3.8V, equivalent to 0.011-0.019 kWh. This provides 8-12 hours of active usage.
Tablets usually feature 6,000-10,000 mAh batteries at 3.7V, translating to 0.022-0.037 kWh, supporting 10-15 hours of mixed use.
Portable chargers range from 10,000-30,000 mAh at 3.7V internal (5V output), providing 0.037-0.111 kWh to charge multiple devices.
Laptop batteries typically offer 40,000-100,000 mAh at 11.1-14.8V, equivalent to 0.444-1.48 kWh for 4-10 hours of operation.
EV battery packs contain modules with hundreds of thousands of mAh at high voltages (200-800V), totaling 40-100+ kWh for 200-400 mile range.
Portable solar generators feature 50,000-300,000 mAh capacity at 12-48V, providing 0.6-14.4 kWh for off-grid applications.
Related Energy Conversions
Formula: Wh = mAh × V ÷ 1,000
Direct conversion without the kilo prefix, commonly used for smaller batteries.
Formula: Ah = mAh ÷ 1,000
Converts milliamp-hours to amp-hours, standard unit for larger batteries.
Formula: mAh = kWh × 1,000,000 ÷ V
Reverse conversion when energy capacity is known in kilowatt-hours.
Formula: kWh = Wh ÷ 1,000
Simple unit conversion between watt-hours and kilowatt-hours.
Formula: kWh = Ah × V ÷ 1,000
Converts amp-hour capacity to energy with voltage consideration.
Formula: J = kWh × 3,600,000
Converts electrical energy to SI unit joules for scientific calculations.
Why Voltage Matters in Conversion
Milliamp-hours (mAh) measure electric charge capacity—how much current a battery can deliver over time. Kilowatt-hours (kWh) measure energy—the actual work potential of that charge. The crucial difference is voltage.
Two batteries with identical mAh ratings can store vastly different amounts of energy if their voltages differ.
For instance, a 10,000 mAh battery at 3.7V stores 0.037 kWh, while the same 10,000 mAh at 12V stores 0.12 kWh—more than three times the energy. This is why laptop batteries with lower mAh ratings can outlast smartphone batteries with higher mAh values.
Common battery voltages include:
- 3.7V: Standard lithium-ion cells in smartphones and tablets
- 3.8V: High-density lithium-polymer batteries
- 5V: USB charging standard and power bank outputs
- 11.1V / 14.8V: Laptop battery packs (3-4 cells in series)
- 12V / 24V / 48V: Automotive, marine, and solar energy systems
- 400V / 800V: Electric vehicle high-voltage battery architectures
Applications in Real-World Scenarios
Airlines typically limit portable batteries to 100 Wh (0.1 kWh) without approval, with an absolute maximum of 160 Wh (0.16 kWh). A 20,000 mAh power bank at 5V equals 100 Wh—exactly at the limit. At 3.7V, that same capacity is only 74 Wh, well within regulations.
A residential solar power station with 100,000 mAh at 48V stores 4.8 kWh. This can power a refrigerator (150W) for 32 hours, LED lighting (50W) for 96 hours, or a laptop (60W) for 80 hours during grid outages.
An EV with a 60 kWh battery pack operating at 400V has an effective capacity of 150,000,000 mAh (150 Ah). At 200 Wh/mile efficiency, this provides approximately 300 miles of range on a single charge.
A camping setup with a 30,000 mAh portable station at 12V (0.36 kWh) can run a 12V cooler (40W) for 9 hours, charge 8 smartphones (15 Wh each), or power LED camping lights (5W) for 72 hours.
Frequently Asked Questions
Battery Chemistry Comparison
| Battery Type | Nominal Voltage | Energy Density | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lithium-Ion (Li-ion) | 3.6-3.7V | 150-250 Wh/kg | Smartphones, laptops, EVs |
| Lithium-Polymer (LiPo) | 3.7-3.8V | 130-200 Wh/kg | Drones, RC vehicles, thin devices |
| Lithium Iron Phosphate (LiFePO4) | 3.2V | 90-160 Wh/kg | Solar storage, power stations, EVs |
| Lead-Acid | 2V per cell (12V system) | 30-50 Wh/kg | Automotive, backup power, solar |
| Nickel-Metal Hydride (NiMH) | 1.2V | 60-120 Wh/kg | Hybrid vehicles, rechargeable AA/AAA |
Calculation Steps
Follow these steps to manually convert mAh to kWh:
- Locate the battery capacity in milliamp-hours (mAh) from the device specifications or battery label
- Find the nominal voltage (V) rating, typically printed on the battery or listed in technical specifications
- Multiply the mAh value by the voltage: mAh × V
- Divide the result by 1,000,000 to convert to kilowatt-hours: (mAh × V) ÷ 1,000,000
- Round to an appropriate number of decimal places (typically 3-4 places for accuracy)
- Verify the result makes sense for the application (smartphone: 0.01-0.02 kWh, laptop: 0.4-1.5 kWh, EV: 40-100 kWh)
For 3.7V batteries, divide mAh by 270,000 to get approximate kWh. For 5V systems, divide by 200,000. This provides a fast mental estimate.
