How Many Amps Is 3 kVA at 24V?
3 kVA at 24V DC draws 125 amps. At DC there is no power factor distinction, so 3 kVA equals 3 kW of real power. At 24V this is a very high current and implies specialized equipment like an EV traction battery, large solar inverter input, or an industrial DC power supply.
3 kVA equals 125 amps at 24 volts (DC)
125 Amps
At DC, kVA = kW (no power factor).
High-current context: 125A at 24V is far beyond a standard branch circuit. Conductor sizing, termination hardware, and protection at this level are specialty items. This page gives the raw conversion; do not use it as a wiring or breaker sizing guide. For any real installation, follow the equipment manufacturer's spec and local code, and consult a qualified installer.
Use this citation when referencing this page.
Assumes a DC circuit at the input voltage. kVA is apparent power, so no power factor term is involved.
Formulas
DC
I(A) = (kVA × 1000) ÷ V
(3 × 1000) ÷ 24 = 3,000 ÷ 24 = 125 A
At DC there is no reactive power, so kVA and kW are the same. The "apparent power" concept only applies to AC systems with phase shift between voltage and current.
Other kVA Ratings at 24V
Frequently Asked Questions
3 kVA at 24V DC is 125 amps. At DC there is no reactive component, so kVA equals kW (3 kW of real power).
No. At low voltage and high current, protection is typically by DC-rated fuses, contactors, or specialty DC breakers sized per the equipment and installation. The raw amps figure here is a starting point for understanding scale, not a prescription for protective-device selection.
It is uncommon in residential or light commercial settings. A 3 kVA load at 24V implies specialized equipment: EV traction battery, large solar inverter DC input, marine or RV battery bank, telecom DC plant, or industrial DC power supply. Ordinary automotive 12V systems are typically under 1 kVA.
No. Power factor only exists in AC systems where voltage and current can be out of phase. On a DC circuit, V and I are in phase by definition, so kVA and kW describe the same thing.
Power is P = V × I. For the same power, halving the voltage doubles the current. At 24V the same 3 kVA that would draw only 12.5A at 240V draws 125A. This is why battery and solar systems use high DC voltages (48V, 400V, 800V) as capacity increases -- to keep current manageable.
This calculator provides estimates for reference purposes only. Always consult a licensed electrician and verify compliance with the National Electrical Code (NEC) and local electrical codes before performing any electrical work.